“If I want him out, he’ll be out of there real fast, believe me.”
—Donald J. Trump, President of the United States
When a sitting president issues veiled threats toward the man at the helm of the U.S. monetary system, it isn’t just political theater—it’s a shot across the bow of the last supposedly “independent” institution in America. But let’s quit the fiction: the Federal Reserve has never been truly independent. And now, its fragile credibility is being strangled by the very same elite tug-of-war it claims to transcend.
Jerome Powell, the banker’s banker, is catching heat from Donald Trump. Again. And while the mainstream headlines want to paint this as a petulant president lashing out at a stoic technocrat, the deeper story is that the American economic house is on fire—and the arsonists are fighting over who gets to hold the hose.
Trump, seated comfortably at Mar-a-Lago, is said to be mulling over Jerome Powell’s fate with the kind of cold confidence only a billionaire president can afford. Reports out of Mar-a-Lago indicate conversations with Kevin Warsh, former Fed governor and one-time Wall Street darling, have veered dangerously close to mutiny. Though Warsh has wisely cautioned against prematurely pulling the trigger, others in Trump’s inner circle aren’t so restrained.
And let’s be clear: Trump’s frustration is not some isolated emotional flare-up. This is strategy. The man is preparing for economic war heading into 2026, and he needs a Fed Chair who will flood the economy with liquidity faster than you can say “quantitative easing.” His attacks on Powell are not just bluster—they are a calculated attempt to force the Fed into lowering rates, damn the consequences.
Let’s burn the fairy tale now: the Fed is “independent” in the same way a casino is fair—so long as the house keeps winning.
Established in 1913 under the guise of stabilizing the economy, the Federal Reserve has morphed into a cartel of unelected technocrats dictating the cost of capital for every American citizen. That power—utterly immune to the ballot box—has propped up Wall Street, funneled trillions to the banking elite, and left Main Street clutching IOUs and evaporating paychecks.
Trump, for all his bombast, is pulling the curtain back on this illusion. His open hostility toward Powell is not without historical precedent.
Rewind to Nixon in 1971. The “conservative” president famously leaned on Arthur Burns, then Fed Chairman, to juice the economy by suppressing interest rates ahead of his re-election. The result? A short-term boom followed by runaway inflation and the dismantling of the Bretton Woods gold standard. Thanks for that, Art.
Or take Reagan’s icy relationship with Paul Volcker, who had the gall to wage actual war on inflation rather than play cheerleader for asset bubbles. Every president wants a compliant Fed. Most just whisper their demands behind closed doors. Trump’s sin is doing it with the volume turned up.
The Federal Reserve Act says the Chair can only be removed “for cause”—but what constitutes “cause” in a legal system where truth is auctioned off to the highest bidder? Courts have long interpreted “cause” narrowly, protecting Fed independence from political mood swings. But with recent Supreme Court rulings tearing down similar protections for other so-called independent agencies like the FTC and NLRB, it’s open season.
Powell’s term as Chair runs until May 2026, and his Board seat stretches to 2028. But none of that will matter if Trump wins the optics war. If Powell won’t play ball, the president doesn’t need to fire him—he just needs to crush him under the weight of public pressure and market panic.
Already, the groundwork is being laid. Powell has become the scapegoat for every downtick in the S&P, every hiccup in job creation, every whisper of recession. It’s the oldest tactic in the authoritarian playbook: create the crisis, blame your enemy, and offer yourself as the solution.
Never one to let a crisis go untelevised, Elizabeth Warren has entered stage left, screaming apocalypse should Powell be fired. According to Warren, markets will crash, democracy will die, and cats will marry dogs.
But here’s the kicker: she also demanded Powell slash rates during the last election cycle. So which is it, Senator? Is Powell a vital institutional shield against dictatorship, or is he a cowardly banker failing working families?
This is the duplicity of modern politics: pretend institutions matter, right up until they don’t serve your agenda.
Let’s connect dots the financial press refuses to.
Trump is watching the People’s Bank of China fire bazookas of stimulus into its own economy. He sees the European Central Bank cut rates for the seventh time, even as their bond markets flirt with collapse. Why should the U.S. play “responsible steward” while global competitors juice their economies with abandon?
The answer is simple: because the Fed doesn’t serve Americans—it serves creditors. That’s why Powell, even with falling oil prices, easing grocery costs, and tariffs fattening government coffers, refuses to cut rates. The Fed exists to protect the dollar’s supremacy and Wall Street’s yield curve, not your mortgage.
And let’s not forget Bill Dudley, the former NY Fed President, who openly urged the Fed in 2019 to resist helping Trump get re-elected. That wasn’t monetary policy—it was sabotage with a smirk. So spare us the lectures about Fed neutrality.
The deeper truth here? Trump’s clash with Powell is a symptom of a system in terminal decline. The post-2008 zombie economy, built on low rates, cheap credit, and endless liquidity, is wheezing toward collapse. If Powell doesn’t cut, recession looms. If he does, inflation reawakens.
Either way, the dollar’s days as king are numbered. And the infighting we’re seeing now is just the overture. When the house of cards falls, no institution—not the Fed, not the Treasury, not the White House—will escape untouched.
The American people never voted for Jerome Powell. They didn’t vote for Janet Yellen, or Ben Bernanke, or Alan Greenspan. And yet, these unelected titans have wielded more power over your savings, your job, your future, than any senator or congressman ever has.
So when Trump says, “If I want him out, he’ll be out,” it’s not just a threat—it’s a dare. A dare to the elite. A dare to the bureaucrats. A dare to a system that claims to be untouchable.
And if that system falls, it won’t be Trump or Powell standing in the rubble. It’ll be the rest of us.
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