Lisa Cook
Says She Will Not Step Down From the Fed
Ms. Cook
said that she would not resign from the board of governors, hours after
President Trump announced he was firing her.
By Yan
Zhuang
Aug. 26,
2025
Updated
2:19 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/26/us/politics/lisa-cook-fed-governor.html
Lisa Cook
said that she would not step down from the Federal Reserve, hours after
President Trump said that he was taking the extraordinary step of removing her
from the central bank’s board of governors.
Mr. Trump
announced the firing, which he said was effective immediately, earlier on
Monday. He cited allegations that Ms. Cook may have falsified records in order
to obtain favorable terms on a mortgage, even though she has not been charged
with wrongdoing or convicted of a crime.
In a
statement released through her attorney on Monday evening, Ms. Cook said that
“no cause exists under the law” for Mr. Trump to fire her.
“I will
not resign,” she said. “I will continue to carry out my duties to help the
American economy as I have been doing since 2022.”
Her
attorney, Abbe David Lowell, added: “We will take whatever actions are needed
to prevent his attempted illegal action.”
Ms. Cook
was initially appointed to the board of governors to fill an unexpired term.
She was reappointed in 2023, and her full term would have ended in January
2038.
To fire
Ms. Cook, Mr. Trump invoked a power in the Fed’s founding statute that allows
him to remove members of the board with cause. He justified the maneuver, a
legally dubious one that could undermine the independence of the central bank,
by claiming that the allegations of mortgage fraud compromised Ms. Cook’s
ability to perform as an effective financial regulator.
Mr. Trump
has made no secret about his desire to remake the roster of the Federal
Reserve, relentlessly attacking the central bank and its members in the hopes
they will lower borrowing costs.
Until
recently, he was focused on Jerome H. Powell, the Fed chair. But his attention
recently turned to Ms. Cook. Bill Pulte, the director of the Federal Housing
Finance Agency, last week accused her of falsifying records to obtain more
favorable terms on mortgages, and said the agency had referred the issue to the
Justice Department.
Yan
Zhuang is a Times reporter in Seoul who covers breaking news.


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