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Jerome Powell: steely Fed chair standing firm in face of Trump’s threats

about 7 hours ago
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There are often few surprises with Jerome Powell.At his handful of public appearances each month, the US Federal Reserve chair always sports the same softly stern expression.His voice, typically dispassionate and near-monotone, never wavers.As one of the most powerful officials in the world, commanding a platform that has the ability to move global markets with a few words, Powell is often reserved in a way that fails to yield soundbites in this social media era: boring, even.That changed on Sunday night.

In a video statement released by the Fed, Powell looked like his usual self.Calm and composed, though without his usual black glasses frame, Powell announced the Trump administration had instigated a criminal investigation against him – and that he would not back down.“I have served at the Federal Reserve under four administrations, Republicans and Democrats alike.In every case, I have carried out my duties without political fear or favor, focused solely on our mandate of price stability and maximum employment,” Powell said.“Public service sometimes requires standing firm in the face of threats.

”It’s almost an unusual message to come out of Washington in Donald Trump’s second presidency, but one that is unsurprising from a man who has dedicated much of the last decade to upholding the political independence of the central bank.For years, this objective required protecting the Fed’s position above the scrum of politics.For months, Trump and his allies have sought to drag it down.After years working in private equity, Powell first joined the Fed in 2012.A registered Republican who was appointed to the Fed’s board by Barack Obama, he swiftly built a reputation as a consensus-builder.

When Trump first tapped him to chair the central bank, in 2018, he was seen as a stable, safe pick – as he was when reappointed by Joe Biden, four years later.In an address to Princeton University’s graduating class last May, Powell expounded on the philosophy that has motivated his work.“I strongly urge you to find time in your careers for public service,” he said.“When you look back in 50 years, you will want to know that you have done whatever it takes to preserve and strengthen our democracy, and bring us ever closer to the Founders’ timeless ideals.”The Fed was created by Congress in 1913 as independent from the president and Congress, to give it the legitimacy it needs to guide markets and manage the US economy.

Economists say a politicized central bank can often negatively affect inflation, and the cost of living.As the face of the Federal Reserve, the role of chair is one of the most delicate – and powerful – in the US government.Speak confidently about the US economy, and stock markets can soar.Say anything about unemployment or prices going up, and they can tumble.Often a boring Fed chair is exactly what the job requires.

Over his eight-year stint in the job, Powell has steered the economy through Covid, soaring inflation, and Trump’s overhaul of US trade and immigration policies.Though some economists criticized Powell for being “dovish” about the post-Covid inflation, when annual price increases surged to 9.1% in summer 2022, he was widely praised for getting close to achieving what is known as a “soft landing”: bringing inflation down by raising interest rates, without bringing up unemployment.Last April, inflation hit 2.3%, the lowest in three years, while the unemployment rate steadied at 4.

2%,During his second term in the White House, Trump has overseen massive anti-immigration operations, lifted US tariffs to levels not seen in decades, and signed off on tens of thousands of federal government layoffs,Surrounded by a group of staunch loyalists, he met little resistance in enacting his economic policies – except when it came to interest rates,The White House’s campaign to get the Fed to lower rates has fallen on deaf ears, and Trump has directed most of his ire onto Powell,From vitriolic social media posts to handwritten missives in thick marker, Trump has called the man he first chose to lead the Fed “a stupid person”, and floated firing him multiple times.

Powell has been unflinching in the face of these attacks.At press conferences, he politely declines to answer any question he considers political.The most he’s given away was when Trump paid a visit to active construction at the Fed’s headquarters last summer, as allies of the president attempted to stir controversy surrounding the project.Addressing reporters side by side, Powell grew visibly frustrated as Trump misreported the cost of renovations.After a long season of restraint, it is an unprecedented criminal investigation – reportedly focused on those renovations – which appears to have pushed Powell over the edge.

In his statement on Sunday, Powell for the first time outlined the extraordinary campaign that the White House has undertaken to push the Fed to lower rates – an incredible violation of the central bank’s independence.This criminal investigation is simply “pretext”, Powell said, noting that threat of the criminal charges comes after the Fed refused to follow “the preferences of the president”.Powell’s term as chair is due to conclude in May.Trump, who has claimed he did not personally know about the justice department’s investigation, says he has already picked a successor.But the launch of a criminal investigation has thrust the world’s most influential central bank into unchartered waters.

The latest escalation of Trump’s campaign against the Fed is bigger than an attack on just one person, according to Powell: the future of the entire institution is on the line,
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Nick Kyrgios delights rowdy fans as tennis cultures clash at Kooyong Classic

The sign at the Kooyong Lawn Tennis Club reads “dress code applies”, but on Tuesday the rules were relaxed. Thousands from all walks of life streamed into the leafy grounds in Melbourne’s inner east to enjoy the first day of the Kooyong Classic, where Nick Kyrgios brought his own brand of tennis to the storied Australian Open warmup event.The 30-year-old announced on Friday he would not be playing singles at Melbourne Park, but he had already committed to Kooyong as he works his way back into shape. So under cloudy skies in Melbourne’s mid-afternoon, he found himself across the net from Chinese former world No 31 Zhang Zhizhen, now ranked 362, and returning from injury himself.Kooyong Lawn Tennis Club was the home of the Australian Open between 1972 and 1987 and is – outside Wimbledon – a bastion of tennis’s grasscourt traditions

about 9 hours ago
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Watching James Bond play my great uncle Brendan in Giant was surreal and spooky | Sean Ingle

The first time I watched Prince Naseem Hamed train, my jaw couldn’t have dropped any faster if he had hit me with one of his lassoing uppercuts. I had followed all his fights on TV, of course. But to see him in the flesh in September 1994, a year before he became world champion, was an altogether more visceral and mesmeric experience.Hamed’s punches sounded like firecrackers welcoming in the new year as they smashed into the pads. He was almost impossible to hit

about 10 hours ago
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Alyssa Healy shifted the dial to propel women’s cricket to its modern heights | Megan Maurice

“I’m not cut out for this.”This is not a sentiment that anyone who has observed Alyssa Healy’s long and storied career would have associated with such a champion of the game. But it was this thought that hit Healy early in her career for Australia, trying her hand at opening for her country for the first time and finding herself unable to hit the ball off the square, that demonstrates the depths of her humility and humanity.Always an immense talent growing up, Healy also had the blessing and curse of a famous surname. A blessing in that it ensured doors were always open for her, but a curse in the form of giant expectations that hung like a dark cloud above her head at all times

about 12 hours ago
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Mark Allen advances past Williams in Masters despite battle with food poisoning

Mark Allen shrugged off a bout of food poisoning to beat Mark Williams 6-2, winning five successive frames, and book a Masters quarter-final with Judd Trump or Ding Junhui, who play on Wednesday.Speaking to the BBC, Allen, the 2018 champion, said: “I prepare properly for these events, but I couldn’t prepare for this at all as I’ve been lying in bed all week with food poisoning. I just thought: ‘Go out there and give my best.’ I wouldn’t have had much left if it had got much closer.”Zhao Xintong stepped up his quest to complete snooker’s triple crown after breezing into the quarter-finals

about 18 hours ago
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Swiss resort Crans-Montana, scene of fatal bar fire, will be an Olympic venue in 2038

The Swiss ski resort of Crans-Montana, which was the scene of a fatal bar fire on New Year’s Day, is set to host the Alpine ski races at the 2038 Olympics.Less than a fortnight after the blaze at Le Constellation that killed 40 and injured 116 other people, officials for the bid have said that the municipality is a key site in their proposals for the Games in 12 years’ time.Switzerland has been granted privileged status by the International Olympic Committee, which means no other country will be allowed to bid while it finalises its proposal. Barring an unexpected development, therefore, it will host the 2038 Games.On Monday organisers confirmed that Crans-Montana would stage events as part of its plan to host competitions across the country in 12 years’ time in order to avoid taxpayer spending on construction

1 day ago
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Olympic tensions flare as US skeleton star alleges Canadian coach rigged qualifying event

Sporting tensions between the USA and Canada have erupted once again, this time in skeleton as next month’s Winter Olympics approach.The USA’s Katie Uhlaender, a five-time Winter Olympian in skeleton, has accused the Canadian team of depriving her of a place at the Milan-Cortina Games by manipulating a qualifying event over the weekend.Uhlaender says that Canada deliberately pulled four of its six athletes from the race in the North American Cup in Lake Placid, New York. That meant the field was reduced to under 21 athletes and fewer qualifying points were on offer due to the lack of competition. Uhlaender believes the Canadian team did so to prevent American athletes from catching them in the standings for Olympic qualifying

1 day ago
politicsSee all
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Peter Mandelson apologises for Epstein association in sudden U-turn

about 18 hours ago
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Conservative defections risk making Reform UK into Tory party 2.0

about 22 hours ago
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Law making creation of nonconsensual, intimate images illegal to come into force this week – as it happened

about 24 hours ago
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Step forward, Nadhim Zahawi: the latest, highest-profile rat to flee the Tory ship | John Crace

1 day ago
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Energy and health optimism help lift civil service morale under Labour

1 day ago
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Peter Mandelson declines to apologise for association with Jeffrey Epstein

2 days ago