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BumRushDaShow

(174,153 posts)
Wed Jul 8, 2026, 04:22 AM 14 hrs ago

Trump Administration Puts Plan for Harriet Tubman $20 Bill on Ice

Source: US News & World Report/Reuters

July 7, 2026, at 4:59 p.m.


WASHINGTON, July 7 (Reuters) - The ⁠U.S. ⁠Treasury Department is no longer ⁠planning to put anti-slavery crusader Harriet Tubman on a $20 bill, Treasury Secretary ​Scott Bessent has told Spectrum News. “We are not at present,” Bessent said when asked in a Monday interview ‌if Treasury was still planning to ‌move ahead with the decade-old plan. Bessent did not elaborate, and a Treasury spokesperson declined ⁠to comment beyond ⁠Bessent's remark.

The Obama administration announced in 2016 that Tubman, who was born ​into slavery in the early 1820s and went on to help hundreds of slaves escape, would replace seventh U.S. President Andrew Jackson on the $20 bill. Then-Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said the decision was the result of thousands ​of responses received from Americans.

Tubman would have been the first African American on the face ⁠of ⁠U.S. paper currency.

During his first ⁠presidential campaign, Donald ​Trump, who has since sought to dismantle diversity, equity and inclusioninitiatives, called the move to ​replace Jackson with Tubman "pure political ⁠correctness."He had proposed putting her on the $2 bill or another bill, and no progress was made on the plan during Trump's first presidency.

Read more: https://www.usnews.com/news/top-news/articles/2026-07-07/trump-administration-puts-plan-for-harriet-tubman-20-bill-on-ice

20 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Trump Administration Puts Plan for Harriet Tubman $20 Bill on Ice (Original Post) BumRushDaShow 14 hrs ago OP
Simply F#@& Bessent rogue emissary 13 hrs ago #1
No surprise there. Tubman is both the wrong brer cat 13 hrs ago #2
To be expected from this criminal maladministration wolfie001 11 hrs ago #3
Maybe He's Planning On Putting Obama On the 20 DrFunkenstein 10 hrs ago #4
Only 45 will eventually be allowed on currency BumRushDaShow 10 hrs ago #5
Put his picture on a 86 dollar bill. twodogsbarking 10 hrs ago #6
Brilliant idea!. Kid Berwyn 10 hrs ago #8
Maybe an 86 peso coin would be better. twodogsbarking 10 hrs ago #9
Love collectors' items. Rec "Centavos" for valuation, though... Kid Berwyn 10 hrs ago #10
Hand is enlarged 1500 %. twodogsbarking 10 hrs ago #11
Who was Harriet Tubman? Kid Berwyn 10 hrs ago #7
The Combahee River Raid is one of the most amazing stories of American heroism ever Pinback 9 hrs ago #12
Thank you for sharing most important history. Kid Berwyn 8 hrs ago #16
Wow, thanks -- never heard of this guy til today. Pinback 8 hrs ago #18
Put on ICE? As deporting the whole idea? Ugh! Wonder Why 9 hrs ago #13
Technically BumRushDaShow 9 hrs ago #15
I don't wanna get attacked for asking this, but I'm not understanding something Polybius 9 hrs ago #14
"So why didn't it happen during Biden's? Did Republicans block it, or something else?" BumRushDaShow 8 hrs ago #17
Tubman on currency makes it harder to erase the Underground Railroad from history Martin Eden 6 hrs ago #19
She did more for this country than that racist piece of shit ever did Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin 5 hrs ago #20

rogue emissary

(3,491 posts)
1. Simply F#@& Bessent
Wed Jul 8, 2026, 05:33 AM
13 hrs ago

I know he can slow roll it. It appears he can't cancel the implementation completely. We will get our Tubman's.

brer cat

(27,799 posts)
2. No surprise there. Tubman is both the wrong
Wed Jul 8, 2026, 05:52 AM
13 hrs ago

gender and race to grace our money. This entire administration is full of hate.

BumRushDaShow

(174,153 posts)
5. Only 45 will eventually be allowed on currency
Wed Jul 8, 2026, 08:46 AM
10 hrs ago

Like Mao is on all of the Chinese Yuan denominations -

Kid Berwyn

(25,677 posts)
8. Brilliant idea!.
Wed Jul 8, 2026, 08:56 AM
10 hrs ago

86 on obverse side, 47 on the reverse to match his inability to lie with any semblance of accuracy.

Kid Berwyn

(25,677 posts)
10. Love collectors' items. Rec "Centavos" for valuation, though...
Wed Jul 8, 2026, 09:07 AM
10 hrs ago

We could buy him for what he’s worth and sell him for what he thinks he’s worth. We’d clean up on his MAGA toad swarm.



Like market manipulation, the zero’s new family line of busyness.

Pinback

(13,759 posts)
12. The Combahee River Raid is one of the most amazing stories of American heroism ever
Wed Jul 8, 2026, 09:53 AM
9 hrs ago


I was lucky enough to visit the Gibbes Art Museum in Charleston last year and see the exhibition based on Dr. Edda Fields-Black‘s book about the raid and the larger struggle for Black freedom in the U.S.A.
This exhibition is inspired by the untold story of the Combahee River Raid from the perspective of Harriet Tubman and the enslaved people she helped to free that is revealed for the first time through groundbreaking research by Carnegie Mellon University historian, Edda Fields-Black, Ph.D., in her recent book COMBEE: Harriet Tubman, the Combahee River Raid, and Black Freedom during the Civil War. Working in collaboration with J Henry Fair, renowned environmental photographer, and guest curator, Vanessa Thaxton-Ward, Ph.D., Director of the Hampton University Museum, the exhibition carefully recreates the full journey of these brave soldiers and freedom seekers on that fateful moonlit night.

On June 2, 1863, Harriet Tubman led the largest and most successful slave rebellion in the United States when her group of spies, scouts, and pilots piloted Colonel James Montgomery, the Second South Carolina Volunteers (300 Black soldiers), and one battery of the Third Rhode Island Artillery up the lower Combahee. African Americans working in the rice fields on seven rice plantations along the Combahee heard the uninterrupted steam whistles of the two US Army gunboats and ran to freedom. 756 enslaved people liberated themselves in six hours, more than ten times the number of enslaved people Tubman rescued on the Underground Railroad. The morning after the raid, 150 men who liberated themselves in the Raid joined the Second South Carolina Volunteers and fought for the freedom of others through the end of the Civil War.

Visitors to the exhibition will explore this dramatic event through Fair’s dynamic contemporary and environmentally sensitive photographs and video works, as well as contemporary and historic art objects, and material culture. Some of the artists included in the show include Jacob Lawrence, Faith Ringgold, William H. Johnson, and Stephen Towns. The exhibition sheds new light on the history of Tubman, the environmental challenges faced by enslaved laborers as they sought a path to freedom, and the significance of the Lowcountry’s historic rice fields on modern-day coastal wetlands.

Kid Berwyn

(25,677 posts)
16. Thank you for sharing most important history.
Wed Jul 8, 2026, 10:40 AM
8 hrs ago

The Gibbes Art Museum is now on my Visit List, looking at winter 2026 or spring 2027.

Through our complicated history, through light and shadow, we have persevered – humanity intact.
Art is the reason.


Here's a bit of largely unknown history about a sculptor who created Gateway to Freedom: The International Memorial to the Underground Railway for the City of Detroit, located in Hart Plaza, just north of Windsor, Ontario, Canada:



The International Memorial to the Underground Railroad

Created by Ed Dwight



Ed Dwight Was Going to Be the First African American in Space. Until He Wasn’t

The Kennedy administration sought a diverse face to the space program, but for reasons unknown, the pilot was kept from reaching the stars


Shareef Jackson
Smithsonian Magazine, February 18, 2020

In the early 1960s, U.S. Air Force pilot Ed Dwight was drowning in mail. “I received about 1,500 pieces of mail a week, which were stored in large containers at Edwards Air Force Base. Some of it came to my mother in Kansas City,” Dwight, now 86, recalls. Fans from around the world were writing to congratulate Dwight on becoming the first African American astronaut candidate. “Most of my mail was just addressed to Astronaut Dwight, Kansas City, Kansas.”

The letters, however, were premature. Dwight would never get the opportunity to go to space—despite the publicity and hype—for reasons that remain unclear even to this day.

Dwight was working at the time as a test pilot at Edwards in the Mojave Desert of California, the U.S. Air Force’s premier experimental flight base and a pathway to entering the astronaut corps of NASA. He trained in the Aerospace Research Pilot School, run by aviation icon Chuck Yeager, the first person to break the sound barrier. Edwards holds a legendary status, then and now, as the premier flight test facility of the Air Force, where the likes of Gus Grissom and Gordon Cooper, two of the original Mercury 7 astronauts, and Neil Armstrong, selected in the second group of astronauts, trained as test pilots in experimental jets over the vast high desert that often served as an impromptu runway. During his time at Edwards, Dwight flew jets such as the Lockheed F-104 Starfighter, a supersonic aircraft capable of soaring into the high atmosphere where the pilot could observe the curvature of the Earth.

“The first time you do this it’s like, ‘Oh my God, what the hell? Look at this,’” Dwight recently told the New York Times. “You can actually see this beautiful blue layer that the Earth is encased in. It’s absolutely stunning.”

Snip…

Around this time, Kennedy encouraged leaders in all the military branches to work to improve diversity among their officers. When the first group of NASA astronauts were selected in 1959, the nation’s military officer pilots, initially the only people who could apply to be astronauts, included no people of color. But as Murrow advocated for a black astronaut, Dwight was rising to the rank of captain in the Air Force, armed with an aeronautics degree from Arizona State University and enough flying hours to qualify for the flight test school at Edwards.

Continues…

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/ed-dwight-first-african-american-space-until-wasnt-180974215/

This used to be a photo of Africa from space but, for some reason, NASA took it down:



ETA another image, from European Space Agency:



Pinback

(13,759 posts)
18. Wow, thanks -- never heard of this guy til today.
Wed Jul 8, 2026, 11:06 AM
8 hrs ago

What an amazing exemplar of Black Excellence! Truly an impressive individual.

BumRushDaShow

(174,153 posts)
15. Technically
Wed Jul 8, 2026, 10:13 AM
9 hrs ago

Many many years before "Immigration and Customs Enforcement" ever existed (which only happened in 2002), the term of "putting" something "on ice" had a broad meaning of "chilling or freezing", whether literally, like champagne or a body, or figuratively, like a plan, as some examples.

Polybius

(22,344 posts)
14. I don't wanna get attacked for asking this, but I'm not understanding something
Wed Jul 8, 2026, 10:12 AM
9 hrs ago

So Obama authorized this plan in 2016. Obviously, this takes time, and it wasn't gonna happen in Trump's first term. So why didn't it happen during Biden's? Did Republicans block it, or something else?

BumRushDaShow

(174,153 posts)
17. "So why didn't it happen during Biden's? Did Republicans block it, or something else?"
Wed Jul 8, 2026, 10:44 AM
8 hrs ago
Effort to put Tubman on $20 bill restarted under Biden

The $20 Harriet Tubman Bill Has Yet To Be Released, But U.S. Mint Drops Commemorative Coins

(snip)

While Tubman’s likeness on U.S. currency, specifically the $20 bill, has faced numerous delays, these commemorative coins provide an opportunity for her legacy to be celebrated. The effort to feature Tubman on the redesigned $20 bill is ongoing, with a new note expected to be issued in 2030. The Obama Administration had initially set a 2020 release date for the Tubman bill, The New York Times reported.

In August 2022, President Joe Biden signed the Harriet Tubman Bicentennial Commemorative Coin Act into law for the Mint to produce the coins. The legislation was introduced by Representative Gregory W. Meeks (D-New York) during Black History Month in 2020.

(snip)


Jack Lew (under Obama) had the planning/design schedule and expected for 2020, Mnuchin (under 45) revised it for possible release in 2028, Yellen (under Biden) pushed the date to 2030 but released coins in the interim in 2022, and finally Bessent killed it for now.

I remember the early discussions and public input on what actual image would be used. That took a lot of time.

Martin Eden

(16,142 posts)
19. Tubman on currency makes it harder to erase the Underground Railroad from history
Wed Jul 8, 2026, 12:37 PM
6 hrs ago

Along with the reason the escape route was needed.

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