Mnuchin’s $2.5 Billion Fund Shows a Need for Tougher Ethics Rules: Timothy L. O'Brien

Former Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin’s new investment fund is flush, courtesy of some of the same Middle Eastern countries he courted closely when he was one of the most powerful U.S. financial regulators.

People familiar with Mnuchin’s dealings had been telegraphing this for months. The Washington Post reported back in February that he was considering launching an investment vehicle backed by sovereign wealth funds in the Persian Gulf region. Bloomberg News put names and numbers on that yesterday, reporting that Mnuchin’s firm, Liberty Strategic Capital, had raised $2.5 billion, largely from the Middle East, including Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund.

Jared Kushner, former President Donald Trump’s son-in-law and an enthusiastic envoy to the Middle East during his White House tenure, is pondering a fund of his own. All this looks like cashing in, because of course it is. The Trump administration’s senior ranks included operators with thin resumes and scant expertise, but distinguished by a willingness to routinely blur the lines between self-aggrandizement and public policymaking.

Financial conflicts of interest aren’t new in Washington, and they’ve been bipartisan. Despite successful post-Watergate efforts to tighten ethics rules, Congress, the Supreme Court, the Federal Reserve and the White House continue to witness collisions between commerce and public service. The presidency itself is uniquely vulnerable when money is in play because the meatiest federal ethic guidelines, by design, don’t apply to it. Trump, one of the Oval Office’s wealthiest inhabitants, exploited that flaw.

It’s unclear whether Congress will pass guidelines protecting the presidency from financial predators of any party, but Mnuchin’s new fund is a reminder that it’s time to strengthen rules governing the financial activities of former Treasury secretaries, too. The Treasury Department has an in-house unit that monitors compliance with ethics guidelines, and agency officials also have to file disclosure reports with the Office of Government Ethics. But when employees leave the agency they are left to their own devices.