Trump, in
a Move With Little Precedent, Says He Is Firing a Fed Governor
President
Trump told Lisa Cook that he had found sufficient cause “to remove you from
your position.” Ms. Cook and her lawyer said they would fight the firing.
Tony Romm Colby Smith Ben Casselman
By Tony
RommColby Smith and Ben Casselman
Aug. 25,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/25/us/politics/lisa-cook-fired-trump-fed.html
President
Trump said on Monday that he was taking the extraordinary step of removing Lisa
Cook from the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, in a legally dubious
maneuver that could undermine the independence of the nation’s central bank.
Mr. Trump
justified the firing, which he said was effective immediately, by pointing to
allegations that Ms. Cook may have falsified records to obtain favorable terms
on a mortgage. But Ms. Cook and her lawyer vowed to fight her dismissal,
maintaining that the president did not have the grounds to oust her.
Ms. Cook
has not been charged with wrongdoing or convicted of a crime. In the days
before Mr. Trump attempted to remove her, the president had made no secret
about his desire to remake the roster of the Fed, as he savaged its members,
including Jerome H. Powell, the chair, for keeping interest rates too high.
By
targeting Ms. Cook, Mr. Trump appeared to set the stage for a landmark battle
that could define the limits of his power over the Fed. Many legal experts
raised serious concerns late Monday with the manner of Ms. Cook’s dismissal,
and the president’s justification for doing so, as they warned that Mr. Trump’s
intervention could compromise an institution at the heart of the economy with
damaging results.
In a
letter posted to social media, Mr. Trump said the allegations of mortgage fraud
undermined Ms. Cook, who was confirmed by the Senate in 2022 as the first Black
woman to serve on the Fed’s board. The president claimed she could not perform
as an effective financial regulator, as he invoked a power in the Fed’s
founding statute that allows him to fire governors for cause.
In a
statement released through her lawyer 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.”
Ms.
Cook’s lawyer, Abbe Lowell, added: “We will take whatever actions are needed to
prevent” her firing.
With Ms.
Cook’s dismissal, Mr. Trump could effectively stand to gain a majority soon at
the Fed, one composed of members he has appointed to the posts, with Mr.
Powell’s term set to expire next year.
Peter
Conti-Brown, a professor at the Wharton School of the University of
Pennsylvania, said it would spell “the end of central bank independence as we
know it” if Mr. Trump were to prevail, adding: “The president will run riot
over the Federal Reserve by using the formidable resources of the U.S.
government against our own central bank.”
The
allegations against Ms. Cook came from Bill Pulte, the director of the Federal
Housing Finance Agency, who has spent weeks fanning Mr. Trump’s ire against the
Fed over its approach to monetary policy. Mr. Pulte for months similarly
drummed up accusations against Mr. Powell, accusing him of mismanaging a
renovation of the Fed’s headquarters, while privately at one point urging the
president to fire him.
Mr. Pulte
specifically claimed that Ms. Cook had committed mortgage fraud, alleging that
she improperly designated both a condominium in Atlanta and a home in Ann
Arbor, Mich., as her primary residence when taking out loans. In doing so, Mr.
Pulte said, Ms. Cook had “falsified bank documents and property records” in a
way that allowed her to obtain a lower interest rate.
Unveiling
his findings over a week of social media posts and television interviews, Mr.
Pulte referred the case to the Justice Department, which opened a criminal
investigation at his request, and he urged Mr. Trump to fire Ms. Cook, which
the president later said he would do if she did not depart on her own.
By
focusing on Ms. Cook’s mortgages, in particular, Mr. Pulte’s tactics fit an
emerging pattern of political retribution. Both he and Mr. Trump have trotted
out similar allegations of fraud against the president’s perceived enemies,
including Senator Adam B. Schiff of California, who as a Democratic
representative led congressional inquiries into Mr. Trump during his first
term, and Letitia James, the New York State attorney general, who won a civil
fraud trial against Mr. Trump before he returned to office.
By
Monday, the president seized on the allegations to dismiss Ms. Cook, telling
her in a letter posted to Truth Social that the accusations of mortgage fraud
were sufficient “to remove you from your position.”
Under the
Federal Reserve Act, the law that charters the central bank, Mr. Trump may
dismiss a governor only if he can demonstrate cause, typically defined as
professional neglect or malfeasance. In recent days, legal experts have
questioned whether the president could satisfy that burden, given the fact that
the allegations against Ms. Cook have not been proved in court and involve
personal matters.
But Mr.
Trump sought to make the case.
“The
Federal Reserve has tremendous responsibility for setting interest rates and
regulating reserve and member banks,” he said in his letter. “The American
people must be able to have full confidence in the honesty of the members
entrusted with setting policy and overseeing the Federal Reserve. In light of
your deceitful and potentially criminal conduct in a financial matter, they
cannot and I do not have such confidence in your integrity.”
Lev
Menand, a professor at Columbia Law School and former economist at the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York, said Ms. Cook’s dismissal appeared at first glance to
be an “illegal firing,” since it did not appear that the president provided
proper notice and allowed her an “opportunity to be heard.”
“I think
that central bank independence was hanging by a thread before this,” Mr. Menand
said, adding that the risks stood only to grow.
The Fed
occupies a unique and defining role in the economy, assigned to monitor
inflation and keep watch over the labor market. With Ms. Cook’s departure, Mr.
Trump could appoint a new loyalist to the critical board who shares his desire
for a swift and dramatic reduction in interest rates, even though economists
fear that a premature reduction could cause severe damage.
“The
illegal attempt to fire Lisa Cook is the latest example of a desperate
president searching for a scapegoat to cover for his own failure to lower costs
for Americans,” Senator Elizabeth Warren, Democrat of Massachusetts, said in a
statement. “It’s an authoritarian power grab that blatantly violates the
Federal Reserve Act, and must be overturned in court.”
In her
sole comments, issued in a statement last week, Ms. Cook said she had “no
intention of being bullied to step down from my position,” but pledged to
“answer any legitimate questions and provide the facts.”
Her
departure nonetheless would create a second vacancy for Mr. Trump to fill on
the seven-member Federal Reserve Board, after another governor, Adriana Kugler,
resigned unexpectedly earlier in August. The president has nominated Stephen
Miran, currently the chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers,
to fulfill Ms. Kugler’s term, which concludes in January. Both posts require
Senate confirmation.
A
correction was made on Aug. 25, 2025: An earlier version of this article
misstated when Lisa Cook issued a statement on efforts to remove her. She
issued it last week, not this week.
When we
learn of a mistake, we acknowledge it with a correction. If you spot an error,
please let us know at nytnews@nytimes.com.Learn more
Tony Romm
is a reporter covering economic policy and the Trump administration for The
Times, based in Washington.
Colby
Smith covers the Federal Reserve and the U.S. economy for The Times.
Ben
Casselman is the chief economics correspondent for The Times. He has reported
on the economy for nearly 20 years.


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