If we are going to remove someone, which I have no problem with doing, then let's do the 20, not the 10, the very first secretary of the Treasury, Alexander Hamilton.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
If the Treasury Department should not remove Hamilton from the $10 bill, what should they do? The answer is fairly simple: Replace Andrew Jackson on the $20 bill.
If we can't remove a member of Congress who has been convicted of 10 felonies - including using his office for personal gain - we risk losing the faith and trust of the American people that we have.
If you are going to replace somebody off of one of the bills - which I have no problem with a lady being on one of the bills - that you would replace the 20.
Since I was first nominated to serve as Treasury Secretary, I have been maligned as taking advantage of others' hardships in order to earn a buck. Nothing could be further from the truth.
As treasury secretary, I don't see it as my role commenting on the dollar in short-term movements.
Give a member of Congress a junket and a mimeograph machine and he thinks he is secretary of state.
Replacing General McChrystal with David Petraeus was a good first step, but more will be needed.
I'm the only American alive or dead who presided unhappily over the removal of a vice president and a president.
Nobody is going to delegate a lot of power to a secretary that they can't control.
Of course I've already taken a very modest position on the monetary system, I do take the position that we should just end the Fed.
No opposing quotes found.