Trump considers naming next Fed chair early, WSJ reports
U.S. President Donald Trump has toyed with the idea of selecting and announcing Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's replacement by September or October, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday citing people familiar with the matter.
(Reporting by Pretish M J in Bengaluru; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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Khaleej Times
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US tightens monitoring of social media accounts of foreign students applying for visa
President Donald Trump's administration on Wednesday ordered the resumption of student visa appointments but will significantly tighten its social media vetting in a bid to identify any applicants who may be hostile towards the United States, according to an internal State Department cable reviewed by Reuters. US consular officers are now required to conduct a "comprehensive and thorough vetting" of all student and exchange visitor applicants to identify those who "bear hostile attitudes toward our citizens, culture, government, institutions, or founding principles," said the cable, which was dated June 18 and sent to US missions on Wednesday. On May 27, the Trump administration ordered its missions abroad to stop scheduling new appointments for student and exchange visitor visa applicants, saying the State Department was set to expand social media vetting of foreign students. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio had said updated guidance would be released once a review was completed. The June 18 dated cable, which was sent by Rubio and sent to all US diplomatic missions, directed officers to look for "applicants who demonstrate a history of political activism, especially when it is associated with violence or with the views and activities described above, you must consider the likelihood they would continue such activity in the United States." The cable, which was first reported by Free Press, also authorised the consular officers to ask the applicants to make all of their social media accounts public. "Remind the applicant that limited access presence could be construed as an effort to evade or hide certain activity," the cable said. The move follows the administration's enhanced vetting measures last month for visa applicants looking to travel to Harvard University for any purpose, in what a separate State Department cable said would serve as a pilot program for wider expanded screening. Online presence The new vetting process should include a review of the applicant's entire online presence and not just social media activity, the cable said, urging the officers to use any "appropriate search engines or other online resources". During the vetting, the directive asks officers to look for any potentially derogatory information about the applicant. "For example, during an online presence search, you might discover on social media that an applicant endorsed Hamas or its activities," the cable says, adding that may be a reason for ineligibility. Rubio, Trump's top diplomat and national security adviser, has said he has revoked the visas of hundreds, perhaps thousands of people, including students, because they got involved in activities that he said went against US foreign policy priorities. Those activities include support for Palestinians and criticism of Israel's conduct in the war in Gaza. A Tufts University student from Turkey was held for over six weeks in an immigration detention centre in Louisiana after co-writing an opinion piece criticising her school's response to Israel's war in Gaza. She was released from custody after a federal judge granted her bail. Trump's critics have said the administration's actions are an attack on free speech rights under the First Amendment of the US Constitution. Fewer appointments? While the new directive allows posts to resume scheduling for student and exchange visa applicants, it is warning the officers that there may have to be fewer appointments due to the demands of more extensive vetting. "Posts should consider overall scheduling volume and the resource demands of appropriate vetting; posts might need to schedule fewer FMJ cases than they did previously," the cable said, referring to the relevant visa types. The directive has also asked posts to prioritise among expedited visa appointments of foreign-born physicians participating in a medical programme through exchange visas, as well as student applicants looking to study in a US university where international students constitute less than 15 per cent of the total. At Harvard, the oldest and wealthiest US university on which the administration has launched a multifront attack by freezing its billions of dollars of grants and other funding, foreign students last year made up about 27 per cent of the total student population. The cable is asking the overseas posts to implement these vetting procedures within five business days.


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Zawya
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Powell says Fed needs to manage against risk that tariff inflation proves persistent
WASHINGTON - The Trump administration's tariff plans may well just cause a one-time jump in prices, but the risk it could cause more persistent inflation is large enough for the central bank to be careful in considering further rate cuts, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell told a U.S. Senate panel on Wednesday. Though economic theory may point to tariffs as a one-off shock to prices, "that is not a law of nature," said Powell, detailing why the central bank wants more information about the ultimate level of tariffs and the way they impact pricing and public expectations about inflation before lowering borrowing costs any further. "If it comes in quickly and it is over and done then yes, very likely it is a one-time thing," that won't lead to more persistent inflation, Powell said. But "it is a risk we feel. As the people who are supposed to keep stable prices, we need to manage that risk. That's all we're doing," through holding rates steady for now. The effects of tariffs "could be large or small. It is just something you want to approach carefully. If we make a mistake people will pay the cost for a long time." Fed officials still expect to cut interest rates this year, but the timing is uncertain as officials wait on coming trade deadlines and hope for more certainty about the scope of the tariffs that will be imposed and the ways that rising import levies influence prices and economic growth. Two days of hearings did little to shift expectations around Fed policy, with investors still anticipating two rate cuts this year. But it did highlight the persistent rift between the Fed chair and President Donald Trump, who wants the Fed to cut rates immediately. Republican lawmakers in the House on Tuesday and in the Senate Banking Committee on Wednesday pressed the Fed chair on why he seems reluctant to do so even though recent inflation data has been more moderate than expected. The tone at times contrasted with Powell's generally congenial relationship with Republican and most Democratic lawmakers during his seven years as chair. Ohio Republican Senator Bernie Moreno, echoing Trump's frequent criticism of Powell, accused him of shaping monetary policy through "a political lens, because you just don't like tariffs." "We got elected by millions of voters. You got elected by one person who doesn't want you to be in that job," Moreno said of Powell, who was promoted to Fed chair during Trump's first term. North Carolina Republican Senator Thom Tillis, however, backed a more cautious approach to the issue, noting that major retailers like Walmart, with sophisticated data tools, were having trouble pinpointing how tariffs will affect prices and demand. "I'm just telling my colleagues we need to be realistic," Tillis said. Companies "have a lot of experts that probably are suggesting there may be some inflationary risk. We haven't realized it yet but I think we all need to keep our eyes open." While Powell was completing what was likely his second-to-last set of semiannual appearances on Capitol Hill, Trump said he had narrowed "to within three or four people" who he intends to nominate as a successor for when Powell's term as chair ends in May. The president's dismay with Powell is rooted in the central bank's refusal to cut interest rates as Trump's tariff plans have, in the view of a broad set of analysts and economists, raised the risk of higher inflation. DIFFERENT THIS TIME Powell, in response to other questions during the hearing, noted the Fed has no modern example of tariff increases of the size Trump is considering, with the tariffs Trump imposed in his first term far smaller than what seems likely now and enacted at a time when inflation was low. The fact that inflation has been above the Fed's 2% target for roughly four years, Fed officials worry, may make a new surge in prices more likely to turn into a more persistent round of price increases. "This is different," Powell said. "There is not a modern precedent." Even with recent inflation more moderate than expected, the central bank expects rising import taxes will lead to higher inflation beginning this summer, Powell said, and the Fed won't be comfortable cutting interest rates until officials see if prices do begin to rise. "We should start to see this over the summer, in the June number and the July we don't we are perfectly open to the idea that the pass-through (to consumers) will be less than we think, and if we do that will matter for policy," Powell said during the House hearing on Tuesday. Tariffs have already risen on some goods, but there is a coming July 9 deadline for higher levies on a broad set of countries - with no certainty about whether the Trump administration will back down to a 10% baseline tariff that analysts are using as a minimum, or impose something more aggressive. The Fed has held its benchmark interest rate steady in the 4.25% to 4.5% range since December. Economic projections released by the Fed last week showed policymakers at the median do anticipate reducing the benchmark overnight rate half a percentage point by the end of the year. But within those projections is a clear divide between officials who take the inflation risk more seriously - seven of 19 policymakers see no rate cuts at all this year - and those who feel any tariff price shock will be less severe or quickly fade. Ten of the 19 see two or more rate reductions. (Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Andrea Ricci)