On his way out the door, President Barack Obama’s Treasury secretary, Jack Lew, floated plans to make former slave and abolitionist Harriet Tubman the historic figure who would take over solemn bust duties on the $20 bill, a position currently held by the U.S.’s seventh president, Andrew Jackson. It would puncture the very male, very white, largely slave-owning streak on money since the Treasury was formed in 1789 (save for Martha Washington’s lengthy tenure as the $1 silver certificate floating head).

Today, the Treasury secretary under President Donald Trump, Steve Mnuchin (you remember his wife, yes?), declined to say whether his department intends to carry out those plans. Mnuchin told CNBC on Thursday, “Ultimately we will be looking at this issue. It’s not something I’m focused on at the moment.”

Mnuchin said he would tweak currency to combat counterfeiting, and so the Treasury’s efforts to change the bills would strictly be a matter of security. When pressed, Mnuchin added, “People have been on the bills for a long period of time. And this is something we will consider. Right now, we’ve got a lot more important issues to focus on.”

Trump was asked about the issue on his campaign, and deemed Tubman “fantastic,” but suggested bringing back the $2 bill, a largely useless denomination of currency, in order to put her on it without displacing anyone else. Trump also adores Andrew Jackson, the architect of the Native American relocation effort later deemed the “Trail of Tears,” slavery advocate, and champion of cronyism. The Civil War, Trump has said, wouldn’t have happened if Jackson could have held on a little longer, and he salutes him anyway:

Elevating Tubman to U.S. currency, on the other hand, would be “pure political correctness,” he said.