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Analysis: How Trump is building a case to fire the Fed chair, explained

Analysis: How Trump is building a case to fire the Fed chair, explained

CNN18-07-2025
The Federal Reserve is an independent organization, meant to be insulated from politics, and the Supreme Court suggested this year that President Donald Trump would need a reason, or cause, to fire Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell.
So Trump — who has repeatedly expressed his anger at the Fed chair for declining to lower interest rates on Trump's watch — is building one up with the help of aides.
It has nothing to do with monetary policy or interest rate incompetence, but rather an over-budget renovation of the Federal Reserve complex, including the historic marble Marriner S. Eccles Building along Constitution Avenue and the National Mall in Washington, DC.
The building opened in the 1930s and hadn't had a complete overhaul in the more than 90 years since then. Powell and other Fed officials took it on as a multi-step, multi-building process.
As frequently happens with government building projects, the project has blown past its planned budget, with the cost skyrocketing from an initially large $1.9 billion to an eye-popping $2.5 billion. Planning got underway during Trump's first term, which is also when Trump nominated Powell to be Fed chairman.
Powell has responded to the criticism and asked the Fed's inspector general to do another review of the project, but Trump's allies, notably Director of the Office of Management and Budget Russell Vought, saying that's not good enough and denying this brewing controversy is a pretext to fire Powell.
In a letter Thursday, Powell refuted allegations of wrongdoing in modifications to the renovation project.
'We have taken great care to ensure the project is carefully overseen since it was first approved by the Board in 2017,' Powell wrote.
Here's a look at what's going on.
'I was surprised he was appointed,' Trump said at the White House on Wednesday, either forgetting or perhaps fudging about his role in first nominating Powell as Fed chair during his first term.
In the years since, as Trump turned on Powell over interest rates and Biden renominated him, prices for the renovation spiraled.
Now, Trump is demanding that the Fed lower interest rates — and raising the case that Powell could be fired over the renovation, although he has said that he will not fire Powell.
A common Republican talking point is that the price of the renovation, some $2.5 billion, exceeds that of the Palace of Versailles with inflation taken into account. Powell surely knows a thing or two about inflation, since he and other members of the Federal Open Market Committee have kept interest rates well above where Trump wants them in order to control inflation.
Invoking the excesses of Louis XIV in pre-Revolution France is an intentional dig by Vought and others.
They have pointed to plans for the building that reference garden terraces on the roof, an executive elevator that takes people to a dining level, and loads and loads of marble.
Powell and the Fed have said those amenities are being taken out of context. The garden terrace on the roof is actually replacing green space on top of an underground parking garage. A green roof on the building is meant, they say, to help with stormwater and longevity, and the practice had previously been encouraged by the federal government. The executive elevator is a rehab of an existing elevator to make it usable by the disabled. The elevator itself was in place when the building first opened. Most of the marble, Powell says, will be reused from the original structure.
Regardless of what's been pared back, people should expect that $2.5 billion does buy a very nice set of rehabbed buildings for the nation's central bank.
There's one great irony to point out here, which is that while the effort to unseat Powell is focused on cost overruns in the redevelopment of a historic building with classical architecture, Trump has also decreed that Washington, DC, be beautified with an emphasis on classical architecture.
As he put it in a memo shortly after taking office in January, 'Federal public buildings should be visually identifiable as civic buildings and respect regional, traditional, and classical architectural heritage in order to uplift and beautify public spaces and ennoble the United States and our system of self-government.'
The original estimate of $1.9 billion has ballooned since 2019. What happened in between — as Powell, more than anyone in the country, can probably tell you — is that the pandemic and the government's response to it caused inflation. Building costs rose.
But there are other reasons. Multiple authorities, including the National Capitol Planning Commission, asked for changes to plans. And the Fed argues it made tweaks to lower costs.
Mitigating asbestos and a higher-than-expected water table also led to overruns, according to an FAQ published on the Fed's website.
It's public money, but Fed funding does not come from Congress. The Fed gets most of its funds from charging interest on the securities it owns in the public interest — treasuries and mortgage-backed securities. But it is buying fewer securities and has let a lot of them fall off its balance sheet as the economy continues to emerge from the pandemic. The Fed has run a deficit in recent years. By aggressively raising interest rates to combat inflation, the Fed had to pay more to banks.
The project is actually for multiple buildings that 'needed a lot of work,' as Powell told senators in June.
The Fed's main Eccles building in particular, Powell said, hadn't had a serious renovation since it opened in the 1930s. 'It was not really safe, and it was not waterproof.'
On its website, the Fed has posted video of water pouring into the building's basement in 2017 and asbestos abatement during the renovation.
Powell bears responsibility. Before he was Fed chairman, he was the administrative governor involved in overseeing the early portions of the project.
'No one in office wants to do a major renovation of a historic building during their term,' he told the Senate Banking Committee in June. 'You much prefer to leave that to your successors and this is a great example why,' he said, referring to the current backlash. 'But we decided to take it on.'
Sen. Tim Scott, who chairs the Senate Banking Committee, seized on reports from both the Wall Street Journal and the New York Post when he grilled Powell about the overruns in June.
But things have gone into overdrive in July.
Vought alleged in a letter he posted to X that Powell may have broken the law.
Trump installed three loyalists on the National Capital Planning Commission, the federal government's planning organization for the DC region, which has some oversight of the project. One of them, Deputy White House Chief of Staff James Blair, has demanded to inspect the construction site.
Vought's letter argues that Powell's June testimony in June that a roof garden terrace and an executive elevator were no longer part of the project suggests changes were made without consulting the planning commission, which approved final plans in 2021. Vought admits minor changes are allowed, but suggests the changes Powell mentioned go further than what could be allowed by law without seeking approval from the commission.
Vought, before he returned to the White House with Trump, was an architect of Project 2025, the Heritage Foundation playbook to remake the US government. Project 2025 takes a counterfactual view of the Great Depression, arguing that banking regulation prolonged the downturn. Project 2025 suggested 'effectively abolishing' the Federal Reserve and returning to a pre-1913 era of banking anarchy.
Trump may or may not share that view, but he does want Powell to lower interest rates. It's actually a committee of Fed bankers, led by Powell, that controls rates. Each of those bankers is appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate.
CNN's Phil Mattingly has reported that the leverage this controversy is creating is part of the point.
But the Federal Reserve itself was intentionally created after a series of banking panics, and gained much more independence in successive decades to insulate it from politics. Presidents from both parties now frequently grouse about the decisions.
With that context, consider the brewing controversy around the renovation of the Fed's headquarters.
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