You don’t have to look in your wallet to know that no paper U.S. currency features the face of an American woman, but one lawmaker wants that to change sometime soon: Rep. Luis Gutierrez urged Congress today to vote on a bill he introduced last month that would change the face of money as we know it, literally, by putting a woman on the $20 bill.
Rep. Gutierrez introduced the Put a Woman on the Twenty Act of 2015 (H.R. 910) on April 21, which seeks “To require the Secretary of the Treasury to convene a panel to solicit recommendations for and select a portrait of a woman to be used in a redesign of the $20 Federal Reserve note.”
Last week, an online campaign called Women on 20s spearheading the effort to get a woman on the $20 bill announced that voters had chosen Underground Railroad conductor Harriet Tubman as the preferred candidate, though Rep. Gutierrez noted during a speech today on the House floor that his bill wouldn’t designate which female should have that honor, just get the Treasury to move forward with plans to replace President Andrew Jackson as the face of the $20 bill.
Using Harriet Tubman as an example of a candidate for the honor, Gutierrez called her an “ideal American” who was “an agitator” and a “subversive.”
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This is stupid. Just as stupid as voting for a president because he is black, or if she were a woman. There is a reason the Flying Wallendas are not on our currency as well.
ReplyDeleteWTH happened to true qualifications?
I agree 8:23 PM.
ReplyDeleteMe three 8:23PM & 9:12PM, it's as if there are absolutely no bounds left untouched by liberalism.
ReplyDeleteFire Congress CALL 202-224-3121 and tell your Congressman OFF!!!
ReplyDeleteJust leave the $20 bill alone, it's just fine the way it is.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteThis 'initiative' rose in concert with Mrs. Bill Clinton's formal decision to run again for President.
We have women on two currently circulating coins; Susan B. Anthony and Sacajawea. We had a woman on a previously issued $1 Silver Certificate (predecessor to our current Federal Reserve Notes); her name was Martha Washington.
So the great leap forward they're looking for already happened.