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Trump nominates Kevin Warsh to be next Fed chairman
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President Donald Trump has nominated former Federal Reserve governor Kevin Warsh to be the next chairman of the central bank’s Board of Governors.

Warsh, 55, would replace current Fed Chairman Jerome Powell when his term is up. The pick was announced in advance of Powell’s departure in May, as expected by Fed watchers.

“I have known Kevin for a long period of time, and have no doubt that he will go down as one of the GREAT Fed Chairmen, maybe the best,” Trump said in his announcement Friday.

Warsh was the youngest person to be nominated as a Fed governor at 35. He is currently a fellow at the Hoover Institution and a lecturer at the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

INFLATION AND AFFORDABILITY LOOM OVER MIDTERM ELECTIONS

Trump has railed against Powell for months, arguing that the Fed has not lowered interest rates quickly enough. Warsh would likely push more aggressively for looser monetary policy.

Most Fed watchers had expected that Trump would either choose Warsh, BlackRock chief fixed-income strategist Rick Rieder, or National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett to lead the central bank.

Trump addressed the other names that had been floated in subsequent social media posts on Friday morning, calling Hassett “indescribably good.”

“Their was great speculation that highly respected Kevin Hassett was going to be named Chairman of the Fed, and a great Chairman he would have been but, quite honestly, he is doing such an outstanding job working with me and my team at the White House, that I just didn’t want to let him go,” Trump wrote.

He made similar comments about Rieder, saying he and all the others interviewed for the job “would have been outstanding, and have a great and unlimited future with ‘TRUMP.'”

Warsh is a bit of an outsider in the sense that he has not been a public policymaker for over a decade. Still, he was on the Board of Governors throughout the Great Recession and has been a prominent name in the finance and economics world for quite some time.

The Fed has been cutting interest rates in recent months, even if more slowly than Trump prefers. The central bank pared interest rates back by a modest quarter of a percentage point at several meetings in 2025, but held off on cutting rates again in January.

Then-President George W. Bush nominated Warsh to the Fed board in 2006, and he served in the role under former President Barack Obama as well. A big chunk of his time at the Fed overlapped the 2008 financial crisis and the …
Trump nominates Kevin Warsh to be next Fed chairman Who benefits from this decision? President Donald Trump has nominated former Federal Reserve governor Kevin Warsh to be the next chairman of the central bank’s Board of Governors. Warsh, 55, would replace current Fed Chairman Jerome Powell when his term is up. The pick was announced in advance of Powell’s departure in May, as expected by Fed watchers. “I have known Kevin for a long period of time, and have no doubt that he will go down as one of the GREAT Fed Chairmen, maybe the best,” Trump said in his announcement Friday. Warsh was the youngest person to be nominated as a Fed governor at 35. He is currently a fellow at the Hoover Institution and a lecturer at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. INFLATION AND AFFORDABILITY LOOM OVER MIDTERM ELECTIONS Trump has railed against Powell for months, arguing that the Fed has not lowered interest rates quickly enough. Warsh would likely push more aggressively for looser monetary policy. Most Fed watchers had expected that Trump would either choose Warsh, BlackRock chief fixed-income strategist Rick Rieder, or National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett to lead the central bank. Trump addressed the other names that had been floated in subsequent social media posts on Friday morning, calling Hassett “indescribably good.” “Their was great speculation that highly respected Kevin Hassett was going to be named Chairman of the Fed, and a great Chairman he would have been but, quite honestly, he is doing such an outstanding job working with me and my team at the White House, that I just didn’t want to let him go,” Trump wrote. He made similar comments about Rieder, saying he and all the others interviewed for the job “would have been outstanding, and have a great and unlimited future with ‘TRUMP.'” Warsh is a bit of an outsider in the sense that he has not been a public policymaker for over a decade. Still, he was on the Board of Governors throughout the Great Recession and has been a prominent name in the finance and economics world for quite some time. The Fed has been cutting interest rates in recent months, even if more slowly than Trump prefers. The central bank pared interest rates back by a modest quarter of a percentage point at several meetings in 2025, but held off on cutting rates again in January. Then-President George W. Bush nominated Warsh to the Fed board in 2006, and he served in the role under former President Barack Obama as well. A big chunk of his time at the Fed overlapped the 2008 financial crisis and the …
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