By staying on the Fed’s board, Jerome Powell could be doing incoming Chairman Kevin Warsh a huge favor


Jerome Powell’s continued presence on the Federal Reserve’s board of governors after his term as chairman ends might be awkward for his replacement, but could also be a big favor for Kevin Warsh.

On Wednesday, Powell diverged from long-standing tradition and announced he will remain on the board until the investigation into renovation of the Fed’s headquarters is truly complete. That came after the Justice Department dropped its investigation but left the door open to a renewed probe.

“My concern is really about the series of legal attacks on the Fed, which threaten our ability to conduct monetary policy without considering political factors,” Powell told reporters. “I worry that these attacks are battering the institution.”

He dismissed the notion he would be a “shadow” Fed chair and instead insisted that he would keep a low profile and not interfere with Warsh’s leadership. When asked how he would keep a “low profile” by reporters, he even made light of the situation and ducked below the podium.

Such a situation hasn’t happened since 1948, when Marriner Eccles resigned as chairman and remained on the board until 1951. Powell’s term as chairman ends May 15, but his term as a governor ends January 2028.

While he may not linger on the board all the way to 2028, Powell’s break from the norm could be useful for Warsh, who faces a balancing act of a president demanding rate cuts and the reality of elevated inflation due in part to Donald Trump’s own tariffs and the war on Iran.

Easy target for Trump

Inevitably, Warsh will disappoint Trump when the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) refuses to lower rates with prices ticking higher. After all, the chairman represents just one vote on the 12-member committee.

But Powell will still be around to act as Trump’s punching bag and take at least some of the flak for Warsh. Powell may also be an easier target for Trump initially than his own hand-picked Fed chief.

In fact, Trump wasted no time blasting Powell’s decision, posting on social media that “Jerome ‘Too Late’ Powell wants to stay at the Fed because he can’t get a job anywhere else—Nobody wants him.” It is important to note Trump himself hired him in 2017.

Trump’s feud with Powell goes back to his first term, which also saw the Fed chair resist the president’s demands to lower rates. And as Trump’s prosecution of his past adversaries shows, he doesn’t let go of animosity easily.

By the time Powell finally leaves the board, inflation might be low enough for the FOMC to feel comfortable lowering rates again. Then Warsh can worry less about angry Truth Social posts.



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