- Key insight: President Donald Trump says he will remove Fed Chair Jerome Powell from the central bank if he does not leave after his term expires on May 16. Trump also said his administration will not drop its probe into Powell over renovations at the central bank's headquarters.
- Expert quote: "I'll have to fire him if he's not leaving on time. I've held back firing him. I wanted to fire him, but I hate to be controversial." — President Donald Trump
- What's at stake: President Donald Trump's refusal to drop a criminal probe into Fed Chair Jerome Powell could delay the confirmation of Kevin Warsh, Trump's pick to lead the central bank.
President Donald Trump threatened to fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell if he remains at the central bank beyond the end of his term in May, escalating the president's years-long conflict with the central bank.
In an interview with Maria Bartiromo on Fox Business Wednesday morning, Trump called Powell "a disaster" and signaled he would seek to remove him from the Board of Governors if
"I'll have to fire him if he's not leaving on time," Trump said. "I've held back firing him. I wanted to fire him, but I hate to be controversial. I want to be uncontroversial."
Powell's term as chair ends May 15, though his term as Governor does not expire until 2028. Fed chairs may remain on an acting basis pending the confirmation of a successor;
Trump said during Wednesday's interview that his administration would not drop its criminal probe into Powell over renovations at the central bank headquarters.
"It's a criminal probe, but it's also a probe into incompetence," said Trump.
Trump, during the interview, boasted that if he was in charge of renovating the Federal Reserve's headquarters it would've cost a mere $25 million not over $2 billion.
"Whether it's incompetence, corruption or both, I think you have to find out. I really do. I think you have to find out," he said.
Two prosecutors working under Jeanine Pirro, the U.S. attorney for Washington, D.C., made an unannounced visit to Federal Reserve headquarters Tuesday to review the renovations, according to reporting by
"As you know, Chief Judge Boasberg has concluded that your interest in the Federal Reserve's renovation project was pretextual," Hur wrote in an email to Pirro's office. "Should you wish to challenge that finding, the courts provide an avenue for you; it is not appropriate for you to try to circumvent it."In March,
Trump has already attempted
Trump's refusal to drop the investigation into Powell could complicate the confirmation process for Kevin Warsh, his nominee to lead the Fed.
The outcome of the confirmation process, however, remains uncertain. Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., a member of the committee, has said
"[Tillis] quit, and I think he doesn't want the legacy of stopping a great person who could be great," Trump said. "I think Kevin Warsh is going to be great. He doesn't want the legacy of having an incompetent guy stay there for longer than is necessary.
"I know he said what he said, and maybe it's true, in which case I'll have to live with it, but not as chairman," Trump added. "This guy is a bad chairman, really bad chairman, and I was surprised when Biden extended him, to be honest with you."
Trump said he expects interest rates to fall after Warsh is confirmed.












