By Michael R. Strain
August 26, 2025
President Trump’s attempt to fire Federal Reserve Board
governor Lisa Cook is dangerous and a threat to long-term prosperity. The
Senate needs to be watching carefully, being sure to only confirm future Fed
governors who are perceived to be independent of the president.
The president has been trying to bend the Fed to his will
for months. Trump has mostly focused on Jay Powell, publicly pressuring the Fed
chairman to cut interest rates. That pressure has taken the form of direct statements, childish nicknames,
public musing about firing the chairman, and an attack on the cost of renovating the Fed’s headquarters.
Last night, Trump stepped up his campaign by issuing a
letter firing Cook. The president claims that Cook made false statements on mortgage
agreements that led to her losing his trust and that of the American people.
But it is evident that a large part of Trump’s motivation is to stack the
Federal Reserve Board with governors who agree with him that interest rates
should be lower.
President Trump’s willingness to threaten government
officials with criminal prosecution as a way to resolve policy disagreements is
dangerous. It is an abuse of the justice system and of the powers of his
office. It weakens the rule of law. It will discourage men and women of
integrity and competence from accepting government appointments. In all these
ways, it erodes the foundations of prosperity.
Moreover, Trump’s actions will likely be self-defeating.
The president wants lower long-term interest rates, but his clear hostility
toward the central bank’s independence from politics will put upward pressure
on long rates.
Eroding central bank independence will make investors,
businesses, and households less confident that the Fed will be able to keep
inflation low and stable because they will expect that the president will be
able to bully the Fed into keeping interest rates lower than is merited,
juicing demand and creating inflationary pressure. Higher expected future
inflation will put upward pressure on long rates. In addition, the erosion of
central bank independence and the willingness of the president to criminalize policy
disagreements will increase the perceived risk of holding U.S. Treasury debt.
That too will push up long-term interest rates.
At the time of this writing, financial markets are taking
this episode in stride, and longer-term interest rates have not spiked. But the
president and his supporters should take little comfort from this.
It may be that the president can succeed at removing a
Fed governor without causing a sudden and sharp spike in long rates. Even so,
this will be one more crack in the dam. The more Trump erodes Fed independence
and criminalizes policy disagreements, the more likely it is that a day of
reckoning in the bond market will come.
Fed independence won’t end in a day. But the erosion of
independence will mean that inflation and interest rates will be higher than
they otherwise would be, that businesses will invest less than they otherwise
would, and that living standards will increase slower than they otherwise
would. It means that, when the next crisis hits — a war, a pandemic, a natural
disaster, a financial crisis — investors will be less confident in the ability
of the Fed to meet the challenge. There will be more panic than there otherwise
would be, and the damage from the crisis will be greater.
The Senate needs to be watching all this very carefully.
It is reasonable for senators to grant the president wide latitude on cabinet
appointments. But the upper chamber’s advice-and-consent role should be
exercised much more aggressively when it comes to the Fed — particularly now
that Trump has so aggressively attacked Fed independence.
Currently, there is one vacancy at the Fed. Chairman
Powell’s term ends next May, and he will need to be replaced. And if the courts
do not prevent Cook’s removal — or if she chooses to resign — then the Senate
will have a third nominee to scrutinize. That’s potentially three of the seven
Fed governors.
There is a lot about Cook’s situation that we don’t know.
Did she intend to make false statements on her mortgage forms? At this writing,
she has not denied the allegations Trump has made against her.
Will she be charged with a crime? Of course, support for
the rule of law means that, if Cook is charged and found guilty, she should
face the required consequences. A person convicted of a financial crime would
be an awkward fit for a Fed governor given the institution’s role in financial
regulation, supervision, and markets. Would she resign if convicted? Even if
she is found guilty, can the president fire a Fed governor for mortgage fraud
that occurred before her term began?
These questions serve to reinforce the crucial role the
Senate will play in maintaining Fed independence. Whether Cook stays or goes,
the Senate has to ensure that in the future it confirms only Fed governors who
are perceived to be independent of partisan politics and of the president.
Focus on the forest and not the trees: Trump is hostile
to the Fed’s independence from politics. He wants to bend the central bank to
his will. He is willing to threaten officials with criminal prosecution to get
his way. We are in dangerous territory. If this continues, the American people
will be less prosperous — and less free.
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