From the BBC:
“New US $20 bill with
anti-slavery activist Harriet Tubman delayed”
A redesign of the $20 bill
featuring anti-slavery activist Harriet Tubman, due to be unveiled next year,
has been postponed until 2028, the US treasury secretary says. Steven Mnuchin said the focus was on improving
the banknote's security features and not changing the imagery. Tubman's photo
was due to replace that of former President Andrew Jackson, a slave owner, on
the front of the note. President Donald Trump has called the redesign
"pure political correctness". Harriett Tubman was born into slavery
in the 1820s. After suffering a serious head injury, she escaped and helped to
free more than 70 slaves through the "Underground Railroad", a
network of anti-slavery activists and safe houses. Speaking at a hearing of the
House Financial Services Committee, Mr Mnuchin said "the primary
reason" for the changes was for "counterfeiting issues", and that
the department would focus on the image later. "Based upon this, the $20
bill will now not come out until 2028. The $10 bill and the $50 bill will come
out with new features beforehand," he added, declining to say whether he
supported the decision to add Tubman's picture. The proposed redesign,
announced in 2016 under the Obama administration by then-Treasury Secretary
Jacob Lew after months of public debate, would see Jackson's picture going to the
back of the bill. At the time, Mr Lew said Tubman was "not just a
historical figure but a role model for leadership and participation in our
democracy". Mr Trump has previously expressed admiration for Andrew
Jackson and on the campaign trail in 2016 he suggested that Tubman - whom he
described as "fantastic" - would be better-suited for the $2 bill, a
note that is not widely circulated, or another note. The women last depicted on
US notes were former first lady Martha Washington, on the $1 silver certificate
from 1891 to 1896, and Native American Pocahontas, in a group image on the $20
bill from 1865 to 1869.
^ I believe that Harriet Tubman should
be on our currency. She did a lot for our country and deserves recognition for
that hard work. I personally don’t like
the picture the US Government chose of her for the $20 bill. I think that
picture of her should be altered (above is the sample of the US Government’s
$20 bill with her picture of her on it and also a regular picture of how she
actually looked.) I prefer the way she actually looked over the sample $20 bill
picture. ^
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