There was one question hanging over the room during Tuesday’s meeting of the Senate Banking Committee. According to the hearing schedule, the gathered senators were there to adjudicate Kevin Warsh’s nomination to become the next chair of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. Matters of monetary policy were discussed, but the focus would inevitably return to whether Warsh, if confirmed, would stand up to President Donald Trump and ensure the independence of the Fed from political pressure.
Though it may seem counterintuitive, Warsh’s desire to be entirely nonpolitical potentially undermines the independence the Fed requires.
It’s an issue that barely came up in the most recent confirmation hearings for a new chair, nine years ago. The good news is that Warsh was adamant about having no interest in merely doing Trump’s bidding as chair. “I do not believe that independence of monetary policy is threatened when elected officials state their views on rates,” Warsh declared in in his opening remarks. “Fed independence is up to the Fed.”
Much more troubling, however, was Warsh’s response to a simple question from the committee’s ranking member, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass: “Did Donald Trump lose the 2020 election?” It is not the sort of complicated economic issue that he’d expect to oversee, though it still had a simple factual answer. But Warsh refused to provide a direct response, only saying that “this body certified the election many years ago.”
It’s not encouraging given the pressure Trump has placed on Warsh’s predecessor and the current Fed Chair Jerome Powell. The president’s repeated demand for the Fed to lower interest rates itself shows why central banks like the Federal Reserve require independence. Cheaper credit for consumers and businesses is great in the short term for any politician, especially when rising prices are being used as a political hammer against you. And Trump is even more focused on immediate gratification over long-term planning than most.
Elected officials are always focused on the next campaign cycle, but central banks are meant to have a longer-range vision of the economy and monetary policy. It’s only through their independence that banks are able to credibly say that their focus is on stabilizing inflation, versus making short-term gains to please their political patrons.








