Firing Powell is too risky — even for this White House
By
Bloomberg Opinion (TNS)
President
"There is precedent for presidents leaning on Fed chairs and the [
Given this history, why are Trump’s attempts to bully the Fed and current Chair
Or perhaps it’s because Trump has repeatedly threatened to fire Powell — whom he appointed to a four-year term in 2017, and whom former President
"First and foremost, it helps him with affordability, which is an item that is cutting across party lines. If people cannot afford a mortgage, they want to see lower interest rates. It’s just a straight, good economic play — if you’re a small business, they know exactly how much they’re spending on interest payments," Todd explained. "No. 2, he’s being disruptive and a man of action who’s pushing the
Finally, Todd noted that Trump’s Fed fight satisfies a small but boisterous element of his populist political base that has always been suspicious of the
But like any investment, whether of political capital or of the kind that reads "Federal Reserve Note" at the top, there is downside risk. And as usual, Trump is playing with relatively small political margins. As this week dawned, the president’s job approval rating averaged 45.4%, better than where he stood at this point in his first term but not stellar. Trump is particularly hurting with independents. Only 29% give him positive marks in the latest Gallup survey.
Independents tend to want a chief executive who governs effectively and produces good economic and public safety outcomes. Constantly jabbing at the Fed and taking aim at Powell’s job smacks of the same sort of chaos and instability that exhausts independents and can turn them (and moderate
"The vitriol could be very damaging, the more he keeps this up," longtime Democratic pollster
"It’s hurting him," Trippi said. It’s worth noting that none of the political professionals I spoke with argued to me that Trump is risking a backlash because the
There is one area where both Democratic and Republican insiders agree: The president is courting political peril because of how the markets would respond to any attempt to sack Powell and exert more direct political control over the Fed. The assumption is that markets would react negatively, inflicting immediate and lasting damage to the economy — a development that voters would almost assuredly be quite unhappy with.
That might be why Trump’s talk about replacing Powell before his term as Fed chairman expires in May has been just that: talk. On Sunday, the president’s budget chief,
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