Top Democrat Criticizes Report on Sexual Harassment at FDIC Amid Calls for Martin Gruenberg to Resign

Ms. Waters claimed the report places the focus for ’tone at the top' on the FDIC’s current leader while ignoring former chairs.
Top Democrat Criticizes Report on Sexual Harassment at FDIC Amid Calls for Martin Gruenberg to Resign
House Financial Services Committee Chair Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) during a hearing in the Rayburn House Office Building on Capitol Hill, on May 12, 2022. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
Katabella Roberts
5/10/2024
Updated:
5/10/2024
0:00

Congresswoman Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), the ranking Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee, has criticized a newly published investigation into claims of sexual harassment and misconduct at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).

In a press release on Thursday, Ms. Waters called the probe by law firm Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton into workplace culture at the agency “troubling.”

The third-party investigation, published on Tuesday, found that the FDIC fostered a workplace that included “sexual harassment, discrimination, and other interpersonal misconduct.”

However, Ms. Waters claimed the report places the focus for “tone at the top” solely on the FDIC’s current leader, Martin Gruenberg, a Democrat, while ignoring the activities of its former Republican chairs.

“Unfortunately, the Cleary report diverts attention from the longstanding institutional challenges confronting the FDIC by spotlighting allegations of temperament raised against only one of three individuals who held the Chairmanship of the FDIC during the matters addressed in its review,” the lawmaker wrote.

The California Democrat went on to highlight a 2020 report by the FDIC inspector general which covered part of the tenure of Chair Jelena McWilliams, who was nominated to the position by former President Donald Trump.

Under Ms. McWilliams’s leadership, “employee favorability ratings of the agency declined,” Ms. Waters said.

In 2020, under Ms. McWilliams’s leadership, the FDIC achieved its highest overall “Engagement and Satisfaction” score since 2012, at 82.5, according to the U.S. Office of Personnel Management’s Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey.

In that same year, the agency scored 74.1 for “effective leadership” and in 2021, it scored 76.4 —the highest scores in FDIC history, the survey shows.

That compares to 2022, under Chairman Gruenberg, during which overall engagement was down 68.5, the lowest since 2007.

In that same year, “effective leadership” was also down more than 5 points.

Report ‘Affirms’ Need for Change

“Similarly, investigators informed Committee staff that allegations of temperament were also raised against former Chair Sheila Bair but those were not included in the report,” Ms. Waters said.

“By narrowly focusing the report on the current Chair, the authors of the report do a disservice to FDIC employees and impede the public understanding of the depth of the problems at the FDIC,” Ms. Waters continued.

The congresswoman acknowledged that the latest report “affirms” that the FDIC needs to roll out changes to its policies and programs and improve its workplace culture, “particularly in the area of anti-sexual harassment.”

“All employees deserve a work environment free from abuse and the FDIC under Democratic and Republican leadership has failed to provide that,” she wrote. “Chairman Gruenberg must work diligently to fix what is broken at the FDIC and to restore the trust of employees in his leadership and in the organization,” the lawmaker added.

“The bottom line is Chair Gruenberg and the FDIC Board must promptly implement policies and programs that ensure there is a professional environment where everyone feels safe and protected. To restore trust, FDIC must continue implementing the action plan I requested of Chair Gruenberg last year, along with the recommendations laid out in the report. This must be the FDIC leadership’s top priority.”

Martin Gruenberg, chairman of the FDIC, testifies before the House Financial Services Committee in Washington, on Nov. 15, 2023. (Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times)
Martin Gruenberg, chairman of the FDIC, testifies before the House Financial Services Committee in Washington, on Nov. 15, 2023. (Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times)

Hundreds Reported Sexual Harassment, Discrimination

Ms. Waters’s comments come as lawmakers on both sides of the aisle call for Mr. Gruenberg to resign in the wake of the third-party probe.

The investigation was conducted at the request of the bank regulator. According to the more than 200-page report, over 500 individuals reported experiences of “sexual harassment, discrimination, and other interpersonal misconduct” that they have suffered at the FDIC.

“Those who reported expressed fear, sadness, and anger at what they had to endure,” the report stated. “Many had never reported their experiences to anyone before, while others who had reported internally were left disappointed by the FDIC’s response.”

While the law firm noted that it does not find Mr. Gruenberg’s conduct to be a “root cause” of sexual harassment and discrimination at the agency or the long-standing workplace culture issues identified in its review, it does recognize that, “as a number of FDIC employees put it in talking about Chairman Gruenberg, culture ‘starts at the top.'”

Mr. Gruenberg, who has been a member of the FDIC for over 20 years, has since apologized for overseeing a hostile environment, adding that the report presented “a sobering look inside” the FDIC workplace.

He is set to appear at a hearing before lawmakers from the House of Representatives Financial Services Committee and the Senate Banking Committee later this month.

The Epoch Times has contacted the FDIC and former chairs Jelena McWilliams and Sheila Bair for comment.

Andrew Moran contributed to this report.