U.S. President Donald Trump looks on as Jerome Powell, his nominee to become chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve, speaks at the White House in Washington, U.S., November 2, 2017. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
President Donald Trump’s ongoing legal attacks on Fed Chair Jerome Powell are not only getting dunked by judges in court, but they’re appearing more and more pointless considering that Trump gets to appoint Powell’s replacement next month when Powell’s term expires.
With that in mind, Trump’s normally faithful Republican allies are not only puzzled by his justice department’s targeted investigation of Powell, but getting snippy at the personal nature of the it, according to Semafor.
“Senate Republicans have an increasingly clear message for the Trump administration: If the president wants a new Federal Reserve chair, federal prosecutors need to drop their investigation into Jerome Powell,” reports Semafor, quoting new GOP senate voices threatening ultimatums if Trump wants a new chair.
The movement began with retiring Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C taking a stand against Trump on defending Fed independence, but it is now a growing into chorus of impatient warnings. According to Semafor, publicly and privately, GOP senators are insisting that for Warsh to move into the chair position, the Justice Department probe has to go.
“We don’t want, obviously, cost overruns and so on and so forth — and so I think that [oversight] is going to continue with the [inspector general],” Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D., told Semafor. “But at least as far as the issue with Powell, I think it’d be good if we could get that wrapped up, from the standpoint of getting Warsh in there and moving on.”
Meanwhile, Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) told Semafor that he’d personally “like to see the president get his chairman,” but warned “the best way to do that is finding an off-ramp that takes care of the issue and we get rid of the criminal investigation and we perhaps offer an alternative.”
Semafor reports Tillis was considerably more forceful with his own demands earlier this week, warning fellow senators during Warsh’s Tuesday hearing that “One thing all martyrs have in common: They’re dead.”
“If I’m able to do it and keep the outcome, why should we do anything more than the minimum number of members necessary to accomplish the goal?” Semafor reports Tillis saying, “Why would we expose other people to the discourse?”
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