Trump Slams Fed Chief Powell Over Decision to Stay as Governor

US President Donald Trump attacked Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, saying he wants to stay because he "can't get a job anywhere else." Powell confirmed he will step down as chair on May 15 but remain as a governor, citing recent developments. He warned that the central bank's independence is "at risk" due to unprecedented legal challenges from the administration. Powell stressed that political influence over interest rates would erode credibility and market trust.

Key Points: Trump Blasts Fed's Powell Over Decision to Stay

  • Trump blasts Powell over staying on as Fed governor
  • Powell says independence is "at risk" from legal challenges
  • Powell plans to stay as governor after stepping down as chair
  • Powell says political influence would erode market trust
3 min read

Trump blasts Powell over decision to stay on as Fed governor

Trump attacks Fed Chair Jerome Powell for staying as governor, saying he "can't get a job." Powell warns central bank independence is at risk from political pressure.

"These legal actions by the administration are unprecedented in our 113-year history. - Jerome Powell"

Washington, April 30

US President Donald Trump blasted Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell after the central bank chief said he would stay on as a governor.

"Jerome 'Too Late' Powell wants to stay at the Fed because he can't get a job anywhere else -- Nobody wants him," Trump wrote on his Truth Social account on Wednesday (Local time), reports Xinhua

Earlier, Powell confirmed he will step down as chair on May 15 but plans to remain on the Federal Reserve Board as a governor for a period. He said recent developments influenced that decision.

warned that the central bank's independence is "at risk" amid what he called unprecedented legal challenges, raising concerns about its ability to set policy free from political pressure.

"These legal actions by the administration are unprecedented in our 113-year history," Powell said on Wednesday (local time). He added that such moves are "battering the institution" and could undermine its role in guiding the economy.

Powell said the issue is critical for economic stability. "It is so important... that they can depend over time on a central bank that operates that way, free of political influence," he said.

He noted that the Federal Reserve has already had to defend its authority in court. "We've had to go to court... to defend it," he said, warning of "ongoing threats of additional such actions."

The Fed chief stressed that credibility depends on independence from elected officials. "That piece of institutional architecture separates successful countries from unsuccessful countries," he said.

He said political influence over interest rate decisions would erode trust. "If that's what we were doing, we'd have no credibility, markets would lose faith in us," Powell said.

"I had long planned to be retiring... but the things that have happened... have left me no choice but to stay until I see them through," he said.

He rejected suggestions that staying on is political. "I'm literally staying because of the actions that have been taken," Powell said.

Powell said the goal is to preserve the Fed's ability to act without political considerations. He stressed that monetary policy must be guided by economic data and analysis, not electoral pressures.

"Think about it this way -- that you want people to make monetary policy... and focus only on that and ignore political considerations," he said.

He said independence is rooted in both law and long-standing norms. "There's a boundary line between the Fed and the administration... and we need to respect those boundaries," he said.

In response to a question, Powell acknowledged that the institution is under strain but expressed confidence in its resilience. "I am confident... that the Fed will continue to make its decision based on analysis... and not on political considerations," he said.

Central bank independence has been a cornerstone of modern economic policy, allowing authorities to control inflation and stabilise economies without political interference.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Trump calling someone 'Too Late' is rich coming from a guy who delayed pandemic response by months. Powell might be making a political calculation by staying, but at least he's transparent about it. Independent central banking is what separates stable economies from banana republics. Hope our own leaders take note.
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Michael C
"Jerome 'Too Late' Powell" — that's some Twitter-level name-calling from a former president. Look, I get that political pressure on central banks is real, but Powell staying as a governor when he was supposed to retire does feel a bit like he's picking a fight. Still, I respect his conviction about independence.
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Arjun K
Powell's point about markets losing faith in politically influenced Fed decisions is spot on. When RBI surprised everyone by holding rates in 2023 despite global hikes, markets wobbled but respected the reasoning. Independence isn't just legal—it's earned. Trump's attacks undermine that trust, which hurts ordinary Americans most.
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Sarah B
I'm torn. On one hand, Powell staying on as governor when he could've retired does make him look like he's grandstanding against Trump. On the other hand, if the Fed is genuinely under legal assault, stepping away would be cowardly. The irony is that Trump's own appointee is now his biggest headache.
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Rohit P
Central bank independence is the reason India survived the 1991 crisis and kept inflation under control during COVID. Powell is essentially doing what Raghuram Rajan did in 2013—standing up to political pressure. Trump's tweet is childish, but the bigger issue is that such attacks erode global faith in US economic governance.

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