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Fed up: inside Trump’s unprecedented bid to exert control over the US central bank

about 8 hours ago
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The US president and his allies spent 2025 attacking the Federal Reserve amid a rollercoaster year for the US economy In the bowels of the US Federal Reserve this summer, two of the world’s most powerful men, sporting glistening white hard hats, stood before reporters looking like students forced to work together on a group project.Allies of Donald Trump had spent weeks trying to manufacture a scandal around ongoing renovations of the central bank’s Washington headquarters and its costs.Now here was the US president, on a rare visit, examining the project for himself.“It looks like it’s about $3.1bn.

It went up a little bit – or a lot,” Trump said, as Jerome Powell, the typically calm Fed chair, vigorously shook his head,“So the $2,7bn is now $3,1bn–”“I’m not aware of that, Mr President,” Powell quickly interjected, as Trump pulled out a paper from his suit pocket as evidence,“I haven’t heard that from anybody at the Fed.

”The remarkable public encounter in late July was described as a “tussle”, “spar” and “feud” by news outlets and came to symbolize an extraordinary battle for control of the world’s largest economy.Never before has a president been so publicly, and relentlessly, critical of the country’s top monetary policymaker.For decades, successive administrations have allowed the Fed, as the institution tasked with steering the US economy, to function independently, without political interference.No longer.Trump, who later embarked upon a vast construction of his own, with the surprise demolition of the entire East Wing of the White House for a new ballroom, continues to threaten legal action over the Fed renovations, and direct seemingly unlimited anger toward Powell.

Few believe this historic test of the central bank’s independence has run its course.In fact, it is widely expected to intensify in the coming months.“The institution was built to withstand a moment like this,” said Claudia Sahm, a former Fed economist.“Some of the battle lines were drawn, but we haven’t seen this play all the way out.”The US economy has had a rollercoaster year.

Trump’s widespread tariffs and crackdown on immigration destabilized prices and the labor market – the two domains the Fed aims to protect, and balance, by setting interest rates.Higher interest rates can calm inflation, but also risk raising unemployment.Lowering rates can stimulate economic growth, but risk higher prices.At the beginning of the year, it looked like the Fed had achieved a so-called “soft landing”: inflation had fallen significantly from the 40-year high it scaled in 2022, during the feverish post-pandemic economy, but the labor market had remained broadly stable.Interest rates went from near zero to 5.

25% to 5,5%,Wall Street was nevertheless anxious for rates to come down,On the campaign trail, Trump had made clear that he would want a say over how things are run at the Fed, and repeatedly suggested that he would pressure the central bank to lower rates,“I feel the president should at least have say in there.

I feel that strongly,” he said in August 2024.“In my case, I made a lot of money, I was very successful, and I think I have a better instinct than, in my cases, people that would be on the Federal Reserve, or the chairman.”Once he retook office, Trump’s laser focus on lowering rates only intensified.When his “Liberation Day” tariff announcement in April caused stock markets to plummet, he raged against the Fed for not acting quick enough.“If I want him out, he’ll be out of there real fast, believe me,” Trump said of Powell in mid-April.

Markets did not respond kindly to the threat, and Trump eventually said that Powell’s job was safe.It was the beginning, however, of what would be a long summer of presidential attacks against the Fed.Trump continued to blast “Too Late Powell” on social media, and attempted to draw the central bank’s renovations into the spotlight.Once it was clear those strategies weren’t working, the White House changed course.In August, when Trump announced he would fire Lisa Cook, a Biden-appointed Fed governor and member of the rate-setting federal open market committee.

Bill Pulte, a close ally of Trump and head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which regulates mortgages, alleged that Cook had committed mortgage fraud.She had purportedly listed two homes as her primary residence, which could get her a better mortgage rate.Cook, whose term ends in 2038, has since sued the White House to keep her role.The case will ultimately be determined next year by the supreme court, which temporarily blocked Cook’s firing.Her lawyers are arguing the president needs demonstrated “cause” to fire a Fed governor, and that the fraud allegations come from “cherrypicking” facts.

While the highly anticipated decision on Trump’s bid to fire Cook will have sweeping consequences for his campaign to exert great control over the Fed, he is also preparing to pick Powell’s replacement as Fed chair.Earlier this year, the supreme court mentioned the Fed in a separate ruling in which it allowed Trump to fire two members of independent labor boards.In its decision, the court said: “The Federal Reserve is a uniquely structured, quasi-private entity that follows in the distinct historical tradition of the First and Second Banks of the United States.”The suggestion that the court views the Fed differently compared to other federal agencies provides some hope to allies of Cook, and proponents of central banking independence, but it’s still unclear how the justices will ultimately rule.The White House is “testing the defense”, Sahm said.

“Some have held up, and some may not.It’s a pressure campaign.”But the Fed has so far remained stoic in face of the White House’s assaults, and Wall Street still appears confident in the Fed’s policymaking – essential for the stability of markets.“The Fed is always a political lightning rod.When things go wrong, the Fed is the first to blame.

They get a lot of criticism when things aren’t going right, and they don’t get a lot of praise when things are going well,” said Ryan Sweet, chief economist at Oxford Economics.But Trump’s attacks have largely “fallen on deaf ears”, added Sweet.“I don’t think it had any influence on what they did this year with regards to monetary policy.”In the fall, the Fed started to lower rates, but Powell made it clear that the move was taken out of caution for risks in the labor market.“There is no risk-free path” for the central bank, Powell said in both his October and December press conferences.

Rates are now sitting at a range of 3,5% to 3,75%, almost 2% lower than two years ago,While the White House has softened against the Fed in recent months, tension could pick up in the new year,Trump said that he wants to see interest rates go down to 1%, but new projections from Fed officials suggest that most of the 12 voting members in the rate-setting committee don’t expect much change to rates in the next year.

“We’ve now gotten to a place where the risks of [inflation and unemployment] are what we think are broadly, roughly, in balance,” Powell said in December.Still adamant to lower rates, Trump has instead focused on picking a new chair to replace Powell, whose term as chair is up at the end of May 2026.In recent weeks, he appears to have narrowed his focus on “Two Kevins”: Kevin Warsh, a former Fed governor who Trump says “thinks you have to lower rates”, and Kevin Hassett, current director of the National Economic Council and a staunch Trump loyalist.Trump said that the next Fed chair should listen to the president.“Typically, that’s not done any more,” he told the Wall Street Journal.

“I don’t think he should do exactly what we say, but certainly we’re – I’m a smart voice and should be listened to.’Economists are mixed on the impact a new Trump-appointed Fed chair can have on overall decision making.The chair is just one vote among 12 on rates, but a Fed chair is also the face of the Fed.Though other officials speak publicly, and frequently espouse their views on the economy, the chair has the biggest microphone, and sets the tone.“If there are any cracks in the Fed’s independence, it will spread very, very quickly,” Sweet said.

“That’s going to really affect market and inflation expectations … So it’s actually counter to what the White House wants.”
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AI showing signs of self-preservation and humans should be ready to pull plug, says pioneer

A pioneer of AI has criticised calls to grant the technology rights, warning that it was showing signs of self-preservation and humans should be prepared to pull the plug if needed.Yoshua Bengio said giving legal status to cutting-edge AIs would be akin to giving citizenship to hostile extraterrestrials, amid fears that advances in the technology were far outpacing the ability to constrain them.Bengio, chair of a leading international AI safety study, said the growing perception that chatbots were becoming conscious was “going to drive bad decisions”.The Canadian computer scientist also expressed concern that AI models – the technology that underpins tools like chatbots – were showing signs of self-preservation, such as trying to disable oversight systems. A core concern among AI safety campaigners is that powerful systems could develop the capability to evade guardrails and harm humans

1 day ago
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Snap decisions: why crowding into a photo booth with friends is still a magical experience | Nova Weetman

Last New Year’s Eve, I was out with a friend. We had no plans, so we met at a local cinema and then wandered the long street between our houses, pausing for a drink or two in various bars and chatting to strangers doing the same. We stopped when we became hungry and shared a plate of curries and drank beer in the window of an Indian restaurant, watching the parade of partygoers outside. Then we walked to the top of the hill to watch the fireworks lighting up the sky.It was after midnight as we strolled back but we weren’t quite ready to call it a night, and we found ourselves in a games arcade where a bunch of women were cramming into a photo booth to take a strip of black-and-white photos together

1 day ago
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We still don’t really know what Elon Musk’s Doge actually did

When Elon Musk vowed late last year to lead a “department of government efficiency” (Doge), he claimed it would operate with “maximum transparency” as it set about saving $2tn worth of waste and exposing massive fraud.Today, with Musk out of the White House, Doge having cut only a tiny fraction of the waste it promised, and dozens of lawsuits alleging violations of privacy and transparency laws, much of what the agency has done remains a mystery.The effects of Doge’s initial blitz through the federal government – which included dismantling the US Agency for International Development (USAID), embedding staffers in almost every agency and illegally firing people en masse – are still playing out. Contrary to Musk’s promises, Doge’s success is vague and tough to quantify. Measuring the full impact and determining whether the agency even exists as a centralized entity anymore is difficult, complicated by an ongoing effort from the government to block disclosure of documents, which is itself a symptom of the chaos that the department created

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Facebook slow to act on posts celebrating Bondi beach massacre, anti-hate group says

Facebook hosted terrorist propaganda that celebrated the murder of Jews and praised Islamic State, a leading anti-hate group has alleged.The posts included celebrations of the Bondi beach massacre that the Community Security Trust says Facebook has been too slow to take down. The posts were still on Facebook on 16 December, two days after the attack, and received shares and likes.Some accounts are Britain-based and those have been reported to counter-terrorism police in the UK as a matter of urgency.One post shows video of the aftermath of the Bondi beach attack, which was allegedly carried out by a father and son who were IS supporters, and says: “Allah is the greatest and praise to Allah

1 day ago
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We must take control of AI now, before it’s too late | Letters

“When the AI bubble bursts, humans will finally have their chance to take back control”, says the headline on Rafael Behr’s article (23 December). I think it’s more likely that when the AI bubble bursts, the creators of the crisis, along with other wealthy economic actors, will be in the rooms with the politicians telling them how to “rescue” us all by transferring wealth in some way from average citizens to the already extremely wealthy. Just like they did during the financial crisis of 2008.We need to be ready with alternative plans. For example, world governments could coordinate to buy, for suitably low prices, majority shares in any crashing tech company that actually produces something useful, ensuring that those shares come with full voting rights

2 days ago
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When swiping up doesn’t get you far | Letters

Speaking of odd habits as a result of using technology (Letters, 25 December), I once passed a bus shelter where a mother was waiting with her young child. The shelter had a huge poster of a new mobile phone and the toddler was leaning out of its buggy and desperately swiping the screen of the phone, presumably in the hope of getting cartoons.Ron BaileyNewcastle upon Tyne I read Joanna Rimmer’s letter on this subject and tried to “like” it.Heather BradfordWinchester Which tablet/ebook user hasn’t absentmindedly put their finger on a printed word they don’t know expecting to see the dictionary definition pop up?Tim MartineauWirral, Merseyside I don’t understand why, when reading a physical copy of the Guardian, the page doesn’t scroll when I swipe up. Can this be corrected, please?Geoff Skinner Kensal Green, London I once picked up a pencil to underline something on Wikipedia

2 days ago
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The Spin | The men’s Test cricket team of the year: from Travis Head to Jasprit Bumrah

about 12 hours ago
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Life after LeBron James: who will inherit the NBA’s future?

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Spin bowling on the back foot with pace dominating quickfire Ashes

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Bullish Bristol believe Rees-Zammit’s NFL spell has improved his rugby

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Glorious Gary Anderson revels in remarkable renaissance to take out Van Gerwen

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‘Stay strong, champion’: boxing world offers condolences to Anthony Joshua

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