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Sunday May 25, 2025

Trump studying whether to fire Fed Chair Powell, says adviser

By Reuters
April 19, 2025
US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell attends a press conference, following a two-day meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee on interest rate policy, in Washington, DC, US, March 19, 2025. — Reuters
US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell attends a press conference, following a two-day meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee on interest rate policy, in Washington, DC, US, March 19, 2025. — Reuters

WASHINGTON: White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett on Friday said President Donald Trump and his team were continuing to study if they could fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, a sign that such a move, a matter of great consequence for the central bank’s independence and for global markets, is still an option.

“The president and his team will continue to study that matter,” Hassett said at the White House when a reporter asked if “firing Jay Powell is an option in a way that it wasn’t before.” Hassett’s remarks came a day after Trump ramped up a long-simmering feud with the Fed chair, accusing Powell of “playing politics” by not cutting interest rates and asserting he had the power to evict Powell from his job “real fast.” Trump doubled down on his criticism of Powell on Friday, telling reporters during an Oval Office event: “If we had a Fed chairman that understood what he was doing, interest rates would be coming down. He should bring them down.”

Hassett appeared to distance himself from a 2021 book in which he argued that firing Powell during Trump’s first term would have harmed the reputation of the Fed as an objective and independent manager of the US money supply, potentially compromising the credibility of the dollar and crashing the stock market.

“I think that at that time, the market was a completely different place. And, you know, I was referring to legal analysis that we had back then. And if there’s new legal analysis that says something different, then we need to rethink our response,” Hassett said.