The United States twenty-dollar note (US$20), also referred to as the United States twenty-dollar bill, is a denomination of U.S. currency. A portrait of Andrew Jackson, the seventh U.S. president (1829âÂÂ1837), has been featured on the obverse of the note since 1928; the White House is featured on the reverse. Jackson's portrait on the twenty-dollar note has been noted as ironic, given his well-known opposition to the Second Bank of the United States and his broader resistance to central banking. In Jackson's mercantile heyday on the southwestern frontier, "money was scarce, and the interchange of goods was difficult and hazardous. Barter was still commonly employed in conducting commercial transactions." Lacking a common coin, "Land speculators, merchants, self-made lawyersall dealt in slaves. Indeed they used slaves almost as currency." Enslaved people were embodied wealth in Jackson's world, the "chief security, the most salable and the major part of all agricultural property."
As of December 2018, the average life of a $20 note in circulation is 7.8 years before it is replaced due to wear. Twenty-dollar notes are delivered by Federal Reserve Banks in violet straps.
Andrew Jackson has appeared on the $20 note since the series of 1928. The placement of Jackson on the $20 note is considered ironic; as president, he vehemently opposed both the National Bank and use of paper money. After the president of the Second Bank of the United States, Nicholas Biddle, defied Jackson and requested the renewal of the charter of the Second Bank in an election year, Jackson responded by making it a goal of his administration to destroy the National Bank. Jackson prevailed over Biddle, and the absence of the Second Bank contributed to a real estate bubble in the mid-1830s. The bubble collapsed in the Panic of 1837, leading to a deep depression.
Given Jackson's opposition to the concept of a National Bank, his presence on the $20 note was controversial from the start. When pressed to reveal why the various images were chosen for the new notes, Treasury officials denied there was any political motivation. Instead, they insisted that the images were based only on their relative familiarity to the public. An article in the June 30, 1929 issue of the New York Times, stated "The Treasury Department maintains stoutly that the men chosen for small notes, which are naturally the ones in most demand, were so placed because their faces were most familiar to the majority of people." It is also true that 1928 coincides with the 100th anniversary of Jackson's election as president, but no evidence has surfaced that would suggest that this was a factor in the decision. According to more recent inquiries of the U.S. Treasury: "Treasury Department records do not reveal the reason that portraits of these particular statesmen were chosen in preference to those of other persons of equal importance and prominence."
In a campaign called "Women on 20s", selected voters were asked to choose three of 15 female candidates to have a portrait on the note. The goal was to have a woman on the note by 2020, the centennial of the 19th Amendment which gave women the right to vote. Among the candidates on the petition were Harriet Tubman, Eleanor Roosevelt, Rosa Parks, and Wilma Mankiller, the first female chief of the Cherokee Nation.
On May 12, 2015, Tubman was announced as the winning candidate of that "grassroots" poll with more than 600,000 people surveyed and more than 118,000 choosing Tubman, followed by Roosevelt, Parks and Mankiller.
On June 17, 2015, Treasury Secretary Jack Lew announced that a woman's portrait would be featured on a redesigned note by 2020, replacing Alexander Hamilton. However, that decision was reversed, at least in part due to Hamilton's surging popularity following the hit Broadway musical Hamilton.
On April 20, 2016, Lew officially announced that Alexander Hamilton would remain on the note, while Andrew Jackson would be replaced by Tubman on the front of the note, with Jackson appearing on the reverse. Lew simultaneously announced that the five- and ten-dollar notes would also be redesigned in the coming years and put into production in the next decade. However, as the $20 note was not scheduled to be replaced until after the $10 note, this moved the production date of the referenced note containing Tubman back, frustrating supporters of placing a woman on a note. Secretary Lew reiterated that the $10 note would be redesigned first.
While campaigning for president, Donald Trump responded to the announcement that Tubman would replace Jackson on the twenty-dollar note. The day following the announcement Trump called Tubman "fantastic", but stated that he would oppose replacing Jackson with Tubman, calling the replacement "pure political correctness", and suggested that Tubman could perhaps be put on another denomination instead.
On August 31, 2017, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said that he would not commit to putting Tubman on the twenty-dollar note, explaining "People have been on the notes for a long period of time. This is something we'll consider; right now we have a lot more important issues to focus on." According to a Bureau of Engraving and Printing (BEP) spokesperson, the next redesigned note will be the ten-dollar note, not set to be released into circulation until at least 2026.
In May 2019, Mnuchin stated that no new imagery for the new 2028 $20 note would be unveiled until 2026. He also reaffirmed that the new $20 note would not be moved up ahead of the new $10 or $50 notes due to counterfeiting security concerns regarding the $10 and $50 notes. Mnuchin would not say whether he supported keeping Tubman on the redesigned $20 note. He said that the decision will be left to whoever is Treasury secretary in 2026. Democratic members of the House of Representatives asked Mnuchin to provide more specific reasons for the design release delay. The production date of the new $20 note, 2028, was unchanged from the timeline announced in 2016 by the Obama administration. The Director of the BEP, Len Olijar, released a statement saying that the "BEP was never going to unveil a note design in 2020" and that the illustration used by the New York Times was not a new $20 note. Later in June, the Treasury Department's acting inspector general, Rich Delmar, sent a letter to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer stating that his office would investigate the issue.
In June 2020, the Office of Inspector General released a report detailing the results of its investigation, which concluded that the $20 note's position in the redesign sequence had not changed, that the earlier announcement of the 2020 date by the Obama administration "was made outside of the note development governance structure and without the recommendation of the ACD" (referring to the Advanced Counterfeit Deterrence Steering Committee), that the $10 note redesign set to precede the $20 redesign had already been delayed to no earlier than 2026 by 2016, and that the $20 note had not yet entered the banknote design process and was not expected to be production-ready until 2030.
In January 2021, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki claimed President Joe Biden would accelerate the Tubman redesign. However, a 2022 internal department message from the Treasury Secretary, Janet Yellen, reaffirmed the 2030 debut originally planned by the Trump Administration.