President Obama–who has been criticized for the scarcity of women in his administration–will nominate Janet L. Yellen as chairwoman of the Federal Reserve on Wednesday, administration officials said.
Fed Chair is a powerful policy-shaping job, and the search for a replacement for current chairman Ben Bernanke has been long, unusually public, and bumpy.
Obama’s first choice for the job was clearly Larry Summers, a former adviser to the president; he dropped out of the running in mid-September in the face of opposition from Democratic senators including Elizabeth Warren. Urging Obama to choose Yellen, Senator Warren said “She has great experience, she has great judgment.”
Yellen, who has been the Fed’s vice chairwoman since 2010, would be the first woman to run the central bank. She was a White House adviser, a Fed governor during the Clinton administration, and a professor at the University of California, Berkeley.
Bernanke’s term ends on January 31. Yellen’s four-year appointment as chairwoman must be confirmed by the Senate.









