The Journal. - Who Will Be the Next Fed Chair? Maybe Kevin
Episode Date: July 10, 2025For years, President Trump has feuded with the Federal Reserve and Chair Jerome Powell over interest rates. And now, two Republicans named Kevin (Kevin Hassett, one of Trump’s closest economic advi...sers and Kevin Warsh—a former Fed governor) are vying to be the next chairman of the Federal Reserve. WSJ’s Nick Timiraos takes us inside the contest for the next Fed Chair and what the President might be looking for with his choice. Jessica Mendoza hosts. Further Listening: - Why Trump Pushed His Tariff Deadline - Is the Economy…OK? - Trump 2.0: Where Is the Economy Headed? Sign up for WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Before he was president, Donald Trump had a signature catchphrase.
You're fired.
You're fired.
You're fired.
You're fired.
You're all fired.
You're fired.
Go.
On his reality series, The Apprentice, President Trump made a big show of firing people.
It's a philosophy he's brought into his presidency, firing agency heads and employees across the federal government. And there's one person Trump
has made really clear he wants to get rid of. Jerome Powell, the chair of the
Federal Reserve.
They call him too late Powell because he's always too late. I mean, if you look
at him, every time I did this, I was right 100% he was wrong.
The president's just very unhappy.
That's our colleague Nick Timros.
He covers the Fed.
The Fed has paused interest rate cuts that they began last year because they're worried
that inflation is going to kick back up here due to the president's tariffs.
Trump wants low interest rates and he's going to do whatever he can do to get what he thinks
is necessary there.
Jerome Powell's term as Fed chair doesn't end until May of 2026.
But already, Trump is searching for a replacement, screening candidates in a way that looks a
lot like his reality TV show.
And he's looking for a particular kind of person for the job.
Trump wants two things from his Fed chair. He wants somebody who he can control, who will be loyal to him, and he wants somebody
who looks good on TV.
Now what Trump is also going to want is somebody who's credible with markets.
So you're going to want to have somebody who is loyal to you, who's credible with the
markets, and that could be very hard to find.
A few candidates are already vying for the position.
A handful of men who are promising to shake up the Federal Reserve and cut interest rates,
just like Trump wants.
This is going to be the most unusual Fed transition since the late 1970s.
We won't have seen anything like this.
And that's because the last few times
we've had a transition,
the incoming Fed chair has pledged continuity
with his or her predecessor.
And that is not going to happen this time.
Everybody who gets the job is gonna say,
I will not do what Jay Powell did.
You almost have to say that as a condition to get the job.
So the Fed transition that we are witnessing right now
will be unlike any we have seen in modern times.
It feels like we're watching reality TV.
Welcome to The Journal,
our show about money, business, and power.
I'm Jessica Mendoza.
It's Thursday, July 10th.
Coming up on the show,
the contest for the top job at the Federal Reserve.
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Jerome Powell has led the Federal Reserve since 2018,
after being appointed by President Trump.
And almost from the get-go, Trump has made his frustration clear.
Trump quickly soured on Powell because the Fed was raising interest rates at the time
and Trump didn't want the Fed to keep raising interest rates.
In 2019, the Fed cut interest rates under Powell, but not fast or large enough for Trump's
liking.
Trump wanted lower interest rates.
He thought he was getting that with Powell and he didn't.
It took a global crisis for Trump to finally get what he wanted.
During the pandemic, the Federal Reserve slashed interest rates to almost zero.
Here's Powell in 2020.
Economic policymakers must do what we can to ease hardship
caused by the disruptions to the economy.
At the time, Trump congratulated the Federal Reserve for the move.
And that's really good news.
It's really great for our country.
It's something that we're very happy.
I have to say this.
I'm very happy.
But Trump's happiness with the Fed wouldn't last.
In 2022, then-President Biden reappointed Powell
for a second four-year term.
That same year, inflation soared,
prompting the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates to around 5%.
In the last year, the Fed has lowered interest rates, but not by much.
Trump has called on the Fed to cut rates further, but to his frustration, the agency has refused.
Trump has repeatedly signaled that he wants Powell to resign.
Powell has said he wouldn't step down.
Powell has said he wouldn't step down. I would say the attacks, the noise, the volume against the Fed has just been turned up in
the second term to a degree that we did really not see in the first term.
You now have other Trump advisors piling on, attacking the Fed, saying that the Fed is
just idiotic for keeping interest rates this high.
At times, Trump has even wanted to fire Powell. Can he do that?
Well no president has tried to do it so it's it's not clear whether the president can do
this. In April he teased on social media, Powell's termination cannot come fast enough
and people said, oh are you talking about firing him?
And he said, well, I could get him to leave tomorrow if I wanted him to.
And the market sort of freaked out over this, saying, oh, gee, maybe Trump is
really serious about it this time.
And then he backed down a few days later.
He said, no, no, no, I was never seriously considering that.
Why is that alarming that Trump would want to fire Powell?
Well, you know, there are some people who would say this is the president's right.
He should be able to state his view on monetary policy.
Monetary policy is going to define the rest of his term potentially.
The reason it's a concern in markets is there's always a tension between having a really strong
economy today and having economic stability, having inflation not run out of control.
So the concern here is if you start to interfere with the Fed's ability to do what it thinks
is best for the long run good of the economy, you could get into more periods of high inflation
or economic instability or financial instability.
Until Powell's term is up though, there's not much Trump can do to directly influence the Fed.
So what the president has done instead
is to turn up the pressure on Powell
by looking for his replacement months in advance.
If you tell everybody now who your pick
for the Fed is gonna be,
people will stop listening to Jay Powell
and they'll start listening to the new guy, right?
So that would be one way to undercut Powell,
make him a lame duck sooner,
because interest rate policy is forward-looking.
Markets don't just care what the Fed is gonna do
at the next meeting.
They care what the Fed is gonna do
six, nine, 12 months from now.
So you undercut Powell if you begin to tell everybody, hey, this guy, don't listen to
him anymore.
Listen to this person over here instead.
He's the future kind of thing.
Right.
It's like naming a new pope before the old pope has died.
A White House spokesman said that Trump has made it clear that the Federal Reserve's monetary
policy needs to complement the administration's pro-growth agenda.
He added that the president will, quote,
"...continue to nominate the most qualified individuals who can best serve the American people."
The candidates being considered are after the break. There's regular cold.
And then there's the mountains are blue cold.
Mountain cold refreshment.
Coors Light.
The Chill Choice.
Celebrate responsibly.
Must be legal drinking age.
The apprentice-like contest to replace Jerome Powell could be nearing its season finale, according to NYX reporting.
Two men are topping the list.
Or, I guess I should say, two Kevins.
Kevin Hassett and Kevin Warsh.
Let's start with Kevin Hassett.
What can you tell me about him?
Kevin Hassett is sort of a journeyman economist
in Republican consulting circles.
He was on the McCain campaign in 2000,
the Romney campaign last decade,
and then he ended up working for Trump in 2017.
He became the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors.
It's kind of the president's think tank inside the White House.
Here's Hassett in 2018, after he had been confirmed to lead the Council of Economic
Advisors.
I keep a list of the people who voted for me and against me on my wall.
The people who voted for me, I thank them.
The people who voted against me, they'll tell you this, say, I understand that we disagree,
but I hope that we can work together. And that's the attitude that I take to the CEA because if you're
reading this- After Trump left the White House, Kevin Hassett went and worked with Jerry Kushner,
the president's son-in-law, who started a new investment firm.
So this is somebody who's developed a familiarity with the president's economic philosophy and
his temperament.
He knows Trump about as well as anybody who currently works for the president.
Hassett works in the White House and is one of Trump's closest economic advisors.
But he hasn't always aligned with Trump when it comes to the Federal Reserve.
So as an example, at the end of 2018, when Trump first became very upset with Powell,
he was talking about how he wanted to fire Powell.
And Hassett was among a small group of advisors who got together and told the president,
you just shouldn't do this.
It would be very bad.
It would be very bad. It would be very disruptive.
And without getting anybody's permission,
when Hassett was asked on the White House lawn
if Jay Powell's job was safe, he said 100% yes.
And the market went up a lot that day.
The Dow went up a thousand points.
And Trump later called Hassett and said, good job. You made the market go up
So the Hassett in the first term was somebody who defended the feds independence said this was a good thing
And even the beginning of this year has it was saying what we will respect the independence of the Fed
That changed in the last few weeks
He gave an interview on Maria Bartiromo's Fox Business program where he said the Fed
was being completely political, J-Powell was being completely political.
J-Powell is the person who cut rates right ahead of the election to help Cabo La Harris.
J-Powell is the person who voted to increase rates the first time Donald Trump was elected
even before he was inaugurated.
And so it looks like he's been a person, I'm not saying that he is, but policy action suggests
that he's a person who's been basically doing whatever it is that Elizabeth Warren wants
him to do.
So you see here this pattern of a shift in the view towards the Fed and a shift in the
importance of Fed independence
where Kevin Hassett is no longer talking about the importance of an independent Fed.
Powell flatly rejects the charge that the Fed behaves politically.
In June, Hassett met with Trump about the Fed job at least twice, according to people
familiar with the matter.
The discussions marked a shift for Hassett. In the past, he'd told allies that he wasn't interested in the job.
But now he says he'd take the job if it was offered to him.
Hassett didn't respond to requests for comment.
So let's talk about the other Kevin, Kevin Warsh.
What can you tell me about him?
What's his background?
The other Kevin, Kevin Warsh, was a Fed governor
during the 2008 financial crisis.
He was appointed by George W. Bush.
And Kevin Warsh was a loyal lieutenant to Ben Bernanke,
the Fed chair at the time,
but he flipped at the end of 2010.
He disagreed with some of the more novel interest rate policies that
the Fed was doing.
He left the board after publicly distancing himself from what Ben Bernanke was doing.
And he's really spent the last 15 years as a fairly high profile critic of the Fed.
For example, here's Warsh back in 2022, calling the Fed's handling of inflation slow. If the Fed had acted as leisurely in the 2008 crisis and the 2020 crisis as they're
acting now, where would the markets be then?
Where would the economy be then?
So I must say I'm a little bit puzzled to understand why they've been so slow to recognize
this inflation crisis and so slow to do anything about it. In some ways, Warsh is sort of the more traditional or more establishment pick, having been a
Fed governor.
Is that enough to get the job?
With Trump being an establishment, anything isn't going to be enough to get the job.
You're going to have to demonstrate that you believe in the president's agenda. Kevin Warsh was a free trader 10 years ago.
In 2018, he was writing in the Wall Street Journal
editorial page about the dangers of Donald Trump's
mercantilist rhetoric and the harm that could be caused
to the economy from tariffs.
So Donald Trump would have reason to be skeptical
of whether Kevin Warsh is truly on board with the MAGA economic philosophy.
Warsh has since tried to soften those differences
by speaking out about his support for Trump.
I've got some sympathy with the president's frustrations here, Larry.
Economic growth in the U.S. is poised to boom,
but it's being held down by bad economic policies
coming from the central bank.
The challenge Warsh has is that he does not have an office
in the West Wing the way Kevin Hassett does.
He lacks direct access to Trump, so he has to make his case
either by seeing Trump at one of his golf clubs
or going on TV.
Having that face time is going to be very important here if the president really wants
to size someone up and have confidence that this person is going to do what they want
them to do.
To close that gap, Warsh has discussed traveling to Washington this month to meet with Treasury
Secretary Scott Besson about the Fed position, according to people familiar
with the matter.
Warsh didn't respond to requests for comment.
Aside from Hassett and Warsh, there
is another candidate who's maybe in the running for the job,
Scott Besant himself.
Scott Besant is certainly going to be a sounding
board for the president throughout all of this.
Besant is in the unusual position here of advising the president on a job that the president
might ask him to do.
That's a very real possibility here that Scott Besant will have the right of first refusal
on the Fed chair job.
What our sources have suggested though is that Donald Trump is thinking and vocalizing
his desire for Scott Besant to be his Fed chair.
At a cabinet meeting on Tuesday, he was talking about how much he dislikes Powell and he had
turned to Scott Besson and he said, I like you better.
So he clearly is rolling with this idea that maybe Besson should be his Fed chair.
But you know, it's a little bit like, well, I can't decide between two desserts.
I want to order both of these desserts.
Oh, I don't want you to leave the Treasury.
You're such a good Treasury Secretary.
Couldn't you just do both?
So, you know, one person I spoke to said it's not even clear how serious they are about
this idea of having Besant do both jobs.
You couldn't do it.
But that sort of speaks to where Trump's head is on some of these things.
Besant is already, he has a job, he's treasury secretary.
Could he conceivably be both?
Is that a thing?
No, it's the feds, the law that creates the fed
says you can't have another job
when you're working at the fed.
But, you know, if you put the central bank
jointly under control with the treasury department,
you'd be going back to a completely dependent
central bank. It would ruin the idea that the central bank is independent.
Okay. So between the two Kevins and Scott, who is coming out on top as of this moment?
It's a mugs game to try to predict how, you know, to handicap it. But
right now, Kevin Hassett seems to be ascendant.
He is there.
He is at the White House.
His stock is rising.
Kevin Warsh, his stock is fading a little bit.
And then Scott Besson is waiting in the wings and might be able to intercept this job if
he wants to.
Whoever it turns out to be, Trump is, as you said earlier,
hoping to have greater influence on the Fed by replacing Jerome Powell.
But is it really that simple? Like take the top guy out, put in somebody you like better,
and you're golden?
No. The Fed chair is not a king. The Fed chair doesn't get to decide alone on monetary policy.
Interest rates are set by a committee of 12 people and the Fed chair has one vote.
So the way you influence interest rate policy, even if you're the Fed chair, is through listening
to everybody else, through persuading them.
And there's a tradition at the Fed of unanimous decisions.
These are 11 to 1 votes, 10 to 2 maybe occasionally.
Very rare that you see more than two people dissenting.
And so that power of persuasion and achieving a strong consensus has been an integral part of the Fed and is going to be a challenge for a new chair to do something
that there's not strong justification for doing.
So you're saying the board might still resist Trump's influence regardless of who is chair.
The committee isn't going to do something just because the chair comes in and says do this
And the committee is certainly not going to be swayed by well, we should do this because the president wants it
You know, these are people who have looked back over history and seen times in the past where?
you had huge problems because the Fed was captured by the executive branch and they care about their legacy
and the stability of the economy,
that they're not gonna let that happen.
So after following all this action, Nick,
where is this all headed?
This is going to be like any reality show,
lots of plot twists, very fluid, very hard to predict.
Down to the wire.
Yeah, there will be maybe a series extension.
It'll be heavy drama. That's all for today, Thursday, July 10th.
The Journal is a co-production of Spotify and the Wall Street Journal.
Additional reporting in this episode by Brian Schwartz. Thanks for listening. See you tomorrow.