Trump team ramps up attack on Fed's Powell with criminal indictment threat
By Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir
Jan 12 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's administration has ramped up its pressure campaign on the Federal Reserve, threatening to indict Chair Jerome Powell over comments to Congress about a building renovation project, an action Powell called a "pretext" to gain more influence over interest rates Trump wants cut dramatically.
The latest development in a long-running effort by Trump for greater control over the Fed had immediate fallout, with Republican Senator Thom Tillis, a member of the Senate Banking Committee that vets Presidential nominees for the Fed, saying the threatened indictment puts the Department of Justice's "independence and credibility" in question. Tillis said he would oppose any Trump nominees to the Fed, including the coming choice of successor to Powell as chair, "until this legal matter is fully resolved."
At stake is the independence of the Fed - the world's most important central bank - to set U.S. monetary policy without undue influence by elected officials like Trump who would prefer cheaper borrowing costs for their political appeal.
Powell - elevated to Fed chair by Trump in 2018 - will complete his term as Fed leader in May, but he is not obligated to leave, and a number of analysts saw the latest move by the administration as adding to the chances of him staying on in defiance.
The action - emerging about two weeks before Trump's effort to fire another Fed official, Governor Lisa Cook, will be argued before the Supreme Court - was met with a guarded reaction on Wall Street. Investors have been warily watching as the sparring match between Trump and the Fed has played out ever since Trump was elected to a second term in November 2024 on promises to improve affordability for Americans after a run of high inflation.
U.S. equity index futures were about 0.5% lower ahead of Monday's opening bell, and the dollar weakened. U.S. Treasury yields were little changed. [MKTS/GLOB]
“Tonight’s revelations mark a dramatic escalation in the administration’s effort to kick the legs out from under the Fed, and could unleash a series of unintended consequences that go directly against President Trump’s stated aims," said Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist at Corpay in Toronto.
'THREATS AND ONGOING PRESSURE'
Trump officials' latest salvo was revealed late Sunday by Powell, who said the Fed had received subpoenas from the Justice Department last week pertaining to remarks he made to Congress last summer over cost overruns for a $2.5 billion building renovation project at the Fed's headquarters complex in Washington.
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