Big Bank Group Asks Trump to Define Government Cyber Role

WASHINGTON — Tim Pawlenty, the head of the Financial Services Roundtable and former Minneosta governor, sent a letter Monday to President-elect Donald Trump requesting that he take steps to harmonize government cybersecurity requirements.

"In light of the financial service industry's vital role in processing mass volumes of transactions necessary for the economy to function for consumers and business, it is critical that response and recovery roles be fully clarified in advance," wrote Pawlenty and Christopher Feeney, president of BITS, the technology policy division of FSR.

The group represents large financial services companies.

Trump included improving cybersecurity in his "100-day" plan, but FSR highlighted that "an estimated 85% of the nation's critical infrastructure is owned by private entities" and that the government and private sector should work together to prevent cyberattacks.

The group also called for the creation of a CEO Executive Council that would be made up of financial services CEOs and leaders from relevant government agencies to improve dialogue between government and the private sector.

The council would also work to streamline cybersecurity requirements, which are often overlapping between different regulators.

"We support sound cyber regulations and related oversight, but request that your administration undertake a comprehensive review of the need to align existing requirements against widely adopted cybersecurity frameworks such as the joint industry-government developed NIST Cybersecurity Framework," the letter said.

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