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		Republican senators caution Trump against firing Fed chair Jerome Powell
		[July 17, 2025]  By 
		STEPHEN GROVES 
		WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is gaining some 
		key backing on Capitol Hill from GOP senators who fear the repercussions 
		if President Donald Trump follows through with threats to try and remove 
		the politically independent central banker.
 As Trump seemingly waffled back and forth this week on trying to dismiss 
		the Fed chair, some Republicans in Congress began to speak up and warn 
		that such a move would be a mistake. Trump would potentially obliterate 
		the Fed’s independence from political influence and inject uncertainty 
		into the foundations of the U.S. economy if he fires Powell.
 
 “If anybody thinks it would be a good idea for the Fed to become another 
		agency in the government subject to the president, they’re making a huge 
		mistake,” GOP North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis said in a floor speech.
 
 The measure of support from GOP members of the Senate Committee on 
		Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs showed how traditional Republicans 
		are carefully navigating a presidency in which Trump often flirts with 
		ideas — like steep tariffs or firing the Fed chair — that threaten to 
		undermine confidence in the U.S. economy.
 
 Tillis, who recently decided not to seek reelection after clashing with 
		Trump, later told The Associated Press that the economic fallout from 
		Powell's firing would mostly hurt “little guys like me that grew up in 
		trailer parks that may have a few thousand dollars in a 401k.”
 
 He also pointed out that the underlying complaint that Trump has with 
		the Fed — its reluctance to cut interest rates — is not controlled by 
		Powell alone, but instead a 12-member committee.
 
		
		 
		“The markets expect an independent, central bank,” said GOP South Dakota 
		Sen. Mike Rounds, who cautioned against firing Powell. “And if they 
		thought for a minute that he wasn’t independent, it would cast a spell 
		over the forecasts and the integrity of the decisions being made by the 
		bank.”
 Still, plenty of other Republicans think that dismissing Powell is a 
		fine idea.
 
 “The most incompetent, worst Federal Reserve chairman in American 
		history should resign,” said GOP Ohio Sen. Bernie Moreno.
 
 Trump said he was also encouraged to fire Powell during a meeting with 
		about a dozen far-right House members Tuesday evening.
 
 Do presidents have authority to fire the Fed chair?
 
 House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., told reporters that he was “unhappy 
		with the leadership" at the Fed, but added “I’m honestly not sure 
		whether that executive authority exists” to fire Powell.
 
		House Financial Services Committee chair French Hill has underscored 
		that presidents don’t have the authority to fire the Fed chair, yet has 
		also been sympathetic to Trump’s complaints about Powell’s leadership. 
		He and other Republicans have also noted that Powell’s term as chair is 
		ending next year anyway, and Trump will have an opportunity to name a 
		new chair then.
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            Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., a member of the Senate Banking Committee, 
			tells reporters that it would be a mistake for President Donald 
			Trump to fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, during a vote in 
			the Senate, at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, July 16, 2025. 
			(AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite) 
            
			
			 When Congress started the Federal 
			Reserve over 100 years ago, it insulated it from political pressure 
			by stipulating that its governors and chair could only be fired “for 
			cause” — a higher bar than most political appointees. However, the 
			Trump administration has maneuvered to meet that standard by 
			accusing Powell of mishandling a $2.5 billion renovation project at 
			the Fed's headquarters.
 “When his initial attempts to bully Powell failed, Trump and 
			Republicans in Congress suddenly decided to look into how much the 
			Fed is spending on building renovations,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren, the 
			top Democrat on the Senate Banking Committee, said in a speech 
			Wednesday. “Independence does not mean impunity and I have long 
			pushed for more transparency and accountability at the Fed. But give 
			me a break.”
 
 After Powell sent Congress a letter detailing parts of the 
			renovation project, Sen. Tim Scott, the Senate Banking Committee 
			chair, released a short statement saying Scott “has continued to 
			call for increased transparency and accountability at the Federal 
			Reserve, and this letter is consistent with improving the 
			communication and transparency he is seeking.”
 
 Avoiding a protracted legal battle
 Regardless, it would be legally dubious to fire Powell over the 
			renovation.
 
 "That would be litigated and I don’t see a reason, for cause or 
			otherwise, to remove him,” Sen. John Kennedy, a Republican member of 
			the Senate committee that oversees the Fed, told reporters this 
			week.
 
 He added that he understood the president's “frustration” with the 
			Fed's reluctance to lower interest rates as it tries to tamp down 
			inflation, saying, “I get that, but I think it’s very important the 
			Federal Reserve remains independent.”
 
 Even those Republicans who argued that the president has grounds to 
			fire Powell and piled criticism on the central banker conceded that 
			it would still be a painful step.
 
 “That’s a decision the president will make, and he’s being very 
			deliberate about it," said Moreno, the Ohio senator who called for 
			Powell's resignation. “But I don’t think we should put the country 
			through any of that."
 
			
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