Fed's Powell says he will not quit even if asked by Trump
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell stated he would defy any attempt by incoming President Donald Trump to remove him from office, emphasizing that such action is legally prohibited. Powell affirmed the Fed's independence, stating that the recent ...
Speaking at a press conference following the latest meeting of the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee, Powell was asked if he'd exit central bank leadership if asked by Trump, who repeatedly attacked him in his first term as president. Powell said flatly "no" and noted that removing him, or any of the other Fed governors, ahead of the end of their terms is "not permitted under the law."
Powell spoke after the Fed met expectations and cut its interest rate target range by a quarter percentage point to between 4.5% and 4.75%, as officials continue to normalize monetary policy amid cooling inflation pressures.
Ahead of the U.S. national elections on Tuesday, the Fed had been widely expected to press forward with interest rate cuts.
Powell on Thursday brushed off numerous questions about what Trump's stated policy aims could mean for central bank decision-making. "In the near-term the election will have no effects on our policy decisions," Powell said, adding "we don't guess, speculate and we don't assume what the broader government might do."
Earlier on Thursday CNN had reported that a Trump advisor said the president-elect would keep Powell on through the end of his leadership term, which is set to expire in May 2026. Powell's term as governor extends to the end of January, 2028.
CNN reported that Trump is considering either former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh, now a persistent critic of the central bank, and his former administration chief economist Kevin Hassett as potential Powell replacements.
Fed leadership hold roles that are designed by law to protect them from political pressure and removal outside of their formal terms.
SOURED RELATIONSHIP
Trump named Powell as Fed chair in early 2018 to replace Janet Yellen, who later became President Joe Biden's Treasury Secretary. Biden reappointed Powell to his current term.
Any attempt to try to eject a Fed leader, even if unsuccessful, would likely be received very negatively by financial markets and would also likely fuel fears of rising price pressures.
If Trump policies do create that reality it could stop the Fed from cutting rates as far as it might otherwise have expected, and could even force the central bank to raise rates. For some observers, that suggests the Fed and Trump might be on a collision course.
But for now, the Fed has some breathing room. "President-elect Trump is likely to pressure the Fed to cut interest rates more aggressively like he did during his first term, but at least over the next year it will have little effect on the trajectory of interest rates since the Fed system is structured to insulate rate decisions from pressure from the White House," said Bill Adams, chief economist for Comerica Bank.
Download ET Markets APP