FDIC Chair Says He’ll Leave Job After Toxic Workplace Report
- Martin Gruenberg says he’ll leave once replacement confirmed
- He has faced weeks of criticism for FDIC’s workplace culture
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Martin Gruenberg will step down as head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. after findings of a toxic work environment put the regulator at the center of a heated political fight and fueled calls for his removal.
Gruenberg, 71, faced mounting pressure following a scathing report that detailed allegations of harassment and discrimination at the bank regulator during his tenure. Those findings earlier this month by law firm Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton were based on accounts from more than 500 people and a months-long probe into a Wall Street Journal article about female bank examiners facing a “sexualized, boys’ club environment.”