Securities and Exchange Commissioner Cynthia Glassman said Monday she plans to resign from the agency rather than seek a second five-year term.
“I hope to move on to a new, interesting and challenging endeavor,” Glassman told The Daily Deal.
Securities and Exchange Commissioner Cynthia Glassman said Monday she plans to resign from the agency rather than seek a second five-year term. Glassman, 59, was appointed by President Bush in January 2002 as one of the three Republican commissioners on the five-member panel. Her term at the commission was sometimes controversial. On two major occasions she broke ranks with then-SEC Chairman William Donaldson, another Republican, to oppose new obligations on hedge funds and mutual funds.
May 17, 2006 at 12:00 AM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
Securities and Exchange Commissioner Cynthia Glassman said Monday she plans to resign from the agency rather than seek a second five-year term.
“I hope to move on to a new, interesting and challenging endeavor,” Glassman told The Daily Deal.
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