Opinion
The
Editorial Board
Where’s
Your Evidence, Mr. President?
Aug. 26,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/26/opinion/politics/trump-fed-independence-lisa-cook.html
By The
Editorial Board
The
editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by
expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate
from the newsroom.
President
Trump’s attempt to fire the Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook is a grab for
power in defiance of the nation’s laws, and if it succeeds, it will be to the
detriment of the nation’s interests.
When
Congress created the Fed in 1913, it gave the president the power to appoint
the central bank’s governors, but it did not grant the power to remove them at
will. Mr. Trump does not appear to regard that law as a binding constraint. He
has made clear that he wants to replace the Fed’s leaders because they have
resisted his demands to lower interest rates. In pursuit of this goal, he now
says he is firing Ms. Cook because of “potentially criminal” behavior.
The law
does allow the president to remove Fed governors “for cause,” and Mr. Trump has
not presented any evidence of wrongdoing by Ms. Cook, an economist whom
President Joe Biden appointed to the job three years ago. Mr. Trump has
asserted that she “may have made false statements on one or more mortgage
agreements.” We have two words for the president: Prove it.
In the
absence of any finding of wrongdoing by a judge — or even presenting evidence
to one — Mr. Trump is effectively asserting that the president gets to decide
what counts as cause, which would render the standard meaningless. If the
courts allow him to get away with it, the Fed will be stripped of its
insulation from political pressure. Mr. Trump will be able to bully the central
bank into delivering the economic sugar highs he craves, and we will all suffer
the eventual consequences.
The Fed
is charged with maintaining the health of the financial system and the
stability of the broader economy. It tries to keep unemployment low and
inflation steady. And it’s a thankless job. Maintaining a healthy economy can
require the central bank to limit the pace of short-term growth, which
inevitably incurs the anger of politicians.
To keep
the Fed focused on the nation’s long-term interests, Congress created a board
of seven members who are appointed to 14-year terms. Both the Federal Reserve
Act of 1913 and the Banking Act of 1935 decreed that the president could fire
members of the Federal Reserve Board only “for cause.” Adolph Miller, one of
the first people appointed to the Fed’s board, insisted that this clause be
restated in the 1935 bill, as he feared “political control” of the Fed. He
believed the board should be independent, with members who considered their
work as “a great public responsibility which runs to the public rather than to
an official of the administration of the day.”
Those
governors make mistakes. They have sometimes kept interest rates too high. They
have sometimes kept rates too low. The president, along with every other
American, is welcome to express his views on the current level of the Fed’s
benchmark rate.
But Ms.
Cook and her colleagues are the lawfully appointed representatives of the
American people, experts performing the people’s business to the best of their
ability. As we wrote last month, if Mr. Trump has an idea for a better system,
he should speak it. But he must not be allowed to destroy the current system.
The
Supreme Court deserves significant blame for this situation. In May the court
issued a decision expanding the president’s authority to remove officials at
independent agencies, such as the National Labor Relations Board, while carving
out an exception for the Fed. Its independence, the justices said, remained
intact. Yet the ruling was part of the court’s emergency docket, and the
justices included scant justification for the exception.
Mr.
Trump, as is his habit, has tried to take advantage of the court’s lack of a
clear, definitive standard. By attempting to fire Ms. Cook, he has set up a
direct clash with the conservative court majority he helped create. The
justices didn’t want this fight, but now the courts have to stand up for the
ruling the Supreme Court just made — and for the rule of law.


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