Donald Trump, the reality-TV-president-turned-kingmaker, declared this week that he doesn’t currently plan to fire Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell—but make no mistake, he’s still dangling the sword over Powell’s bureaucratic neck. Like any seasoned manipulator, Trump stopped short of ruling it out altogether, keeping the threat alive to remind everyone who holds the big red button.
For months, Trump has lambasted Powell as a dithering technocrat who was “too late” slashing rates, pinning America’s sky-high borrowing costs on the Fed’s lumbering indecision. Sources say he even privately pitched the idea of booting Powell to a few Republican lawmakers, a move that sent the suits in the financial district into a cold sweat. When Bloomberg ran a piece claiming Trump was getting ready to fire Powell outright, markets went into a mild tailspin—stocks slid, the dollar took a gut punch, and Treasury yields spiked as investors braced for political meddling in the so-called “independent” central bank.
Naturally, the establishment rushed to defend the Fed’s sacred independence. Senator Thom Tillis called the idea of firing Powell a “huge mistake” that would torch whatever shreds of credibility the Fed has left. Senate Majority Leader John Thune tried to smooth things over, telling reporters that Trump had no concrete plans to oust Powell—just idle threats, apparently. French Hill, who chairs the House Financial Services Committee, was quick to remind everyone that the President has no legal grounds to can the Fed Chair just because he doesn’t like the policy playbook. The Supreme Court recently made it official: a Fed Chair can only be removed “for cause,” not because he’s inconvenient.
But in a classic Trumpian twist, the president didn’t stop at monetary policy. He latched onto the Fed’s $2.5 billion headquarters renovation—an absurd boondoggle by any measure—as a potential justification for Powell’s removal. The White House fired off a letter scolding Powell over the renovation’s price tag, to which Powell responded by hauling out the inspector general and publishing a glossy fact sheet claiming everything was above board. Elizabeth Warren, ever the opportunist, called the renovation angle a “clear pretext,” accusing Trump of concocting excuses to get his way.
Analysts warn that all this political theater isn’t just a distraction—it could light a fire under long-term interest rates if investors start demanding inflation protection against a politically compromised Fed. Ironically, the meddling Trump says would lower borrowing costs might actually make it more expensive for Uncle Sam to roll over his trillions in debt. Powell and his band of monetary alchemists are terrified that any premature rate cuts under pressure could re-ignite inflation expectations and unravel their paper-thin credibility.
JP Morgan’s Michael Feroli summed it up: these threats aren’t over. If Trump gets back behind the Resolute Desk, Powell’s seat will never be safe.
Behind closed doors, the vetting of possible successors has already begun. The list of names reads like a who’s who of establishment loyalists and technocratic caretakers: Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, White House economic advisor Kevin Hassett, former Fed governor Kevin Warsh, and the current Fed insider Christopher Waller. Different faces, same machine.
Don’t let the headlines fool you: the real story here isn’t whether Trump fires Powell or who replaces him. It’s that a private banking cartel still controls the currency you earn, save, and spend—and the power to inflate it away at will.
Call to Action:
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