Opening arguments in the historic impeachment trial of former US president Donald Trump will start Wednesday after the Senate voted to approve its constitutionality, but a conviction will be "highly unlikely", experts say.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Washington D.C., Feb. 5, 2021
The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced that Katherine K. Martin, Associate Director in the Office of International Affairs, will leave the agency in February after 15 years of public service.
For the last five years, Ms. Martin oversaw the Commission’s multilateral and bilateral engagement on a wide range of cross-border policy and supervisory cooperation issues.
“Katherine has been a leading player in enhancing the SEC’s relationships with its international counterparts and building consensus on cross-border matters of critical importance to the agency,” said Acting Chair Allison Herren Lee. “Katherine’s deep knowledge of the international financial regulatory landscape and of the capital markets has been invaluable. I thank Katherine for her leadership and her years of service to the Commission.”
Katherine K. Martin, Associate Director In The Office Of International Affairs, To Leave SEC Date
05/02/2021
The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced that Katherine K. Martin, Associate Director in the Office of International Affairs, will leave the agency in February after 15 years of public service.
For the last five years, Ms. Martin oversaw the Commission’s multilateral and bilateral engagement on a wide range of cross-border policy and supervisory cooperation issues.
“Katherine has been a leading player in enhancing the SEC’s relationships with its international counterparts and building consensus on cross-border matters of critical importance to the agency,” said Acting Chair Allison Herren Lee. “Katherine’s deep knowledge of the international financial regulatory landscape and of the capital markets has been invaluable. I thank Katherine for her leadership and her years of service to the Commission.”
No, Trump Didnât Bring Back Jobs From China And Mexico
Now that his term finally is over, let s examine Donald Trump s performance on a key promise: reclaiming manufacturing jobs, especially from China and Mexico, to raise U.S. wages.
Evaluation first, then a grade. (Can you guess?)
Our trade representative, Robert Lighthizer, last summer praised several companies that dropped plans to move jobs offshore. The era of reflexive offshoring is over, he claimed in a
Facts show the opposite. Team Trump encouraged offshore manufacturing, not that you d likely know that from following the news.
In his State of the Union address last year Trump proclaimed a blue-collar boom. It was fact-free nonsense. It didn t happen, not even before Trump s incompetent and malicious pandemic response threw 10s of millions of people, including many factory workers, onto the unemployment lines.