Harriet Tubman escaped slavery in the mid-1800s before guiding hundreds toward freedom via the Underground Railroad. For a moment, her legacy seemed bound to be honored in an undeniable way: a portrait on the front of the $20 bill, pushing the image of Andrew Jackson, the seventh U.S. president and a slaveholder, to the background.

The new design was supposed to be unveiled in 2020 to coincide with the 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment, which granted women the right to vote. But it’s looking like we may not see Tubman on a bill for years, if at all.

This week, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin announced that a $20 bill redesign would not be introduced as planned. At the earliest, we’d see it in 2026. The department, Mnuchin said, would focus on imagery later, not specifying whether it would include Tubman at all.

The plan to give Tubman her own bill was an Obama-era initiative that had already been languishing under the Trump administration. Before he was elected, President Trump expressed reluctance about the move to replace Jackson with Tubman, calling it “pure political correctness” and suggesting she be put on the $2 bill, a far less common denomination, instead.

Trump has described Tubman as “fantastic.” He is also a known fan of Jackson, hanging a portrait of him in the Oval Office and likening their leadership styles. Jackson was the first populist to win the White House.