Wendy Lee Gramm held several positions in the Reagan Administration: executive director of the Presidential Task Force on Regulatory Relief, head of the White House Office of Management and Budget's regulatory review office, director of the Federal Trade Commission's Bureau of Economics, head of the Office of Management and Budget's Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs from 1985 to 1988, and head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission from 1988 to 1993. After a lobbying campaign from Enron, and a few days after the election of Bill Clinton in 1993 and Gramm was set to lose her chairmanship, the CFTC exempted Enron from regulation in trading of energy derivatives. Six days later, she resigned from CFTC and took a seat on the Enron Board of Directors and served on its Audit Committee. Her husband Phil Gramm's 1996 presidential bid was cut short by a political scandal arising from his past investments in the porn industry, which led the New York Post to nickname him "Porno Gramm". While on the board of directors she received donations from Enron to support the Mercatus Center. According to Public Citizen, Enron paid her between $915,000 and $1.85 million in salary from 1993 to 2001. Enron also became the biggest donor to Phil Gramm's political actions. A little under $100,000 were contributed to his campaigns between 1999 and 2001. In 1999, the Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act was passed, which repealed part of the Glass–Steagall Act of 1933 which prohibited any institution from acting as any combination of an investment bank, a commercial bank, and an insurance company. It allowed over-the-counter trading of derivatives which had previously been restricted to regulated exchanges. In 1998, she declared "In my view, there are no systemic problems in the OTC derivatives market”. In 1999, she cash out her shareholdings of Enron, pretending that being a director and a shareholder of the company constituted a conflict of interest. Then right before George W. Bush was elected, Phil Gramm introduced the Commodity Futures Modernization Act which deregulated the trading of derivatives. After the Enron scandal was publicized in October 2001, Gramm and the other directors of the energy company were named in several investor lawsuits, many of which have been settled. In particular, Gramm and other Enron directors agreed to a $168 million settlement in a suit led by the University of California. As part of that settlement, the directors agreed to collectively pay $13 million to settle claims of insider trading. The remainder of the settlement was to be paid by insurance. After Enron, she became head of the Regulatory Studies Program of the Mercatus Center. She expressed no regrets regarding the Enron debacle which she considered a success. On November 1, 2007, she became the chairman of the Texas Public Policy Foundation. In 2011, she appeared on a television spot with her husband, calling on Texans to shoulder the burden of the economic crisis. On October 1, 2019, she resigned as the chairman of the Texas Public Policy Foundation. Gramm also served as a director of the Independent Women's Forum, a conservative women's group. She has sat on the boards of Enron Corporation, Iowa Beef Processors, Invesco Funds, Longitude, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, and State Farm Insurance Companies. Ronald Reagan once said Gramm was "my favorite economist."
Personal life
Wendy Lee Gramm met her husband when she was interviewed by him as a PhD student for a position at Texas A&M University. Phil Gramm, a senior professor, expressed his interest for her after the interview. Six weeks after she arrived on campus, they wed. She has two sons: Jeff, who is in the indie-rock band Aden, and Marshall, a professor of economics at the Presbyterian-affiliatedRhodes College.