
Trump considers 'three or four' successors to 'stupid' Fed chair Powell
Donald Trump has revived his criticism of the head of the US central bank, describing Jay Powell as "terrible" and "stupid", adding that there were up to four candidates to succeed him.
The president, who threatened to fire Mr Powell earlier this year before U-turning on that course this month, has consistently demanded the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates to help bolster economic growth.
But the central bank has held off since Mr Trump's second term in office began, citing threats to the pace of price growth from his on-off trade war.
By raising tariffs on imports in a bid to boost American jobs and make US-produced goods more competitive, Mr Powell believes the spectre of inflation is looming over the world's largest economy.
But the official inflation figures are yet to show any marked increase from rising import costs.
"I know within three or four people who I'm going to pick," Mr Trump said in remarks to reporters while on his visit to Europe for the NATO summit at The Hague.
He said Mr Powell, the Fed chair, was "an average-minded person" with a "low IQ for what he does".
"I think he's a very stupid person, actually," he added.
US media suggest the contenders to succeed Mr Powell include former Fed governor Kevin Warsh, National Economic Council head Kevin Hassett, current Fed governor Christopher Waller and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.
The Fed chair is not due to leave his position until May next year.
The Federal Reserve, like the Bank of England in the UK, is independent of government.
Mr Trump is desperate to grow the US economy after a sharp slowdown in the first quarter of the year was blamed on the threat of his trade war and early salvoes.
Analysts see Mr Trump's on-off criticism of Mr Powell as an attempt to influence monetary policy through the back door.
The prospects of a battle to remove him has previously rattled financial markets.
For his part, Mr Powell told a Congressional hearing on policy on Tuesday that higher tariffs from the trade war could push up inflation this summer - a time when the Fed has already indicated it could move to cut its target range for interest rates.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
32 minutes ago
- Reuters
Harvard scientist accused of smuggling frog embryos indicted on new charges
BOSTON, June 25 (Reuters) - A Russian-born scientist at Harvard University accused of smuggling frog embryos into the United States was indicted on Wednesday on additional charges nearly two weeks after her lawyers secured her release from U.S. custody. Federal prosecutors in Boston said a grand jury returned an indictment, opens new tab charging Kseniia Petrova, 30, with one count of concealment of a material fact, one count of false statement and one count of smuggling goods into the United States. Prosecutors had charged her in May only with smuggling. The two new charges add to her criminal exposure and were filed after her lawyers last week urged a magistrate judge to dismiss the initial criminal complaint. Petrova's lawyers did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Prosecutors secured the indictment after Petrova was granted bail on June 12. She had been detained for months after U.S. immigration authorities took her into custody on February 16 at the airport in Boston upon her return from a trip to France. Her supporters said she was detained as part of the practice by President Donald Trump's administration of targeting international students and academics for visa revocations and detention as part of his hardline immigration agenda. Prosecutors said U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents stopped Petrova, who works at Harvard Medical School, after her checked duffle bag was flagged for inspection, revealing the frog embryos. Petrova has said her boss asked her to bring back frog embryo samples for experiments. But prosecutors said the embryos constituted biological material that should have been declared to customs officials at the port of first arrival. Prosecutors said that when she was approached by law enforcement, Petrova initially denied carrying any biological material in her baggage, and later claimed to be unsure she was required to declare the embryos when entering the United States. But prosecutors said one of Petrova's colleagues had texted saying that she needed to make sure she got permission to bring samples back. Petrova's visa was then canceled and immigration officials took her into custody with the intent of deporting her back to Russia, a prospect Petrova has said she feared after protesting Russia's war in Ukraine.


Daily Mail
32 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
'I didn't call him daddy!' Nato chief insists he did not call Donald Trump daddy... like that
Nato chief Mark Rutte has been forced to backtrack on an embarrassing remark - where he apparently called US president Donald Trump 'daddy.' During a meeting of the defence bloc in the Hague yesterday, Rutte and Trump met following the US president's crass comment on the Iran-Israel war. It was there that the US President he said: 'We basically have two countries that have been fighting so long and so hard that they don't know what the f*** they're doing.' Rutte said on Wednesday that 'Daddy has to use strong language' to get Israel and Iran to sort things out, to which Trump agreed. 'You have to use strong language. Every once in a while you have to use a certain word,' the president said. But the Nato chief's comments raised eyebrows across the world, and later in the day Rutte, the former prime minister of the Netherlands, was forced to backtrack. He said: 'The daddy thing, I didn't call [Trump] daddy, what I said, is that sometimes... In Europe, I hear sometimes countries saying, "hey, Mark, will the US stay with us?" 'And I said, "that sounds a little bit like a small child asking his daddy, 'hey, are you still staying with the family'"? So in that sense, I use daddy, not that I was calling President Trump daddy.' But Trump himself appeared to enjoy being called 'daddy' as he was referred to at Wednesday's Nato Summit in the Hague by Rutte, who has led the defence bloc since October 2024. During Trump's whirlwind press conference that marked his final appearance at the summit, a reporter asked him how he felt when Rutte had referred to the American president as 'daddy' earlier in the day. Secretary of State Marco Rubio (right) giggles behind President Donald Trump (left) as he answered questions about being called 'daddy' by Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte during the Wednesday conference in the Hague, Netherlands 'No, he likes me, I think he likes me! If he doesn't I'll let you know and I'll come back and I'll hit him hard OK?' Trump told the journalist. 'He did it very affectionately though,' Trump continued. '"Daddy, you're my daddy,"' the president said with a smile. Alongside Trump was the usually stoic Secretary of State Marco Rubio. But the former Florida senator couldn't contain his laughter, bending down and giggling during the back-and-forth. The president had previously mouthed the F-word at a campaign rally in 2016 and used the word 'bulls***' while making a briefing room appearance earlier this year. Trump also said during his meeting with Rutte that he believed the Iran-Israel ceasefire will hold. 'They're not going to be fighting each other, they've had it,' the president argued. 'Like two kids in the schoolyard, they fight like hell, you can't stop them. Let them fight for two or three minutes then it's easy to stop them.' The 'schoolyard' comment prompted Rutte's 'daddy' observation. During Trump's press conference, the reporter followed up by asking if the U.S. president viewed 'your Nato allies as sort of children?' 'They're obviously listening to you and they're spending more, and are obviously appreciative of that. But do you think they can actually defend Europe on their own, without you?' the journalist asked. Trump said he believed the European nations would 'need a little help at the beginning.' 'And I think they'll be able to,' he continued. 'And I think they're going to remember this day and this is a big day for Nato, this is a very big day.' Earlier on Wednesday the Nato nations agreed to something Trump had long pushed - a massive increase in defence spending. Most of the 32 Nato countries agreed to language that said 'allies commit to invest 5 percent of GDP annually on core defense requirements as well as defense-and security-related spending by 2035.' But Nato member Spain pushed back on the agreement, and said it would increase its spending to just 2 per cent, which Trump said he would respond to by forcing high tariffs on the nation. He said he doesn't know what 'the problem' with Spain, calling the country's position unfair to other members of the Nato alliance. 'They want a little bit of a free ride, but they'll have to pay it back to us on trade,' he said, making up for it through higher tariffs. But Spain belongs to the European Union, the world's largest trading bloc, which negotiates trade deals on behalf of all 27 member countries. They are not meant to negotiate trade deals individually. Asked about that, Trump said, 'I'm going to negotiate directly with Spain. I'm going to do it myself.' The reporter pressed again asking Trump if the European nations could defend themselves without the U.S. 'Well ask Mark, I think you have to ask Mark, OK?' Trump said. The president was previously nicknamed 'daddy' by former Fox News host Tucker Carlson, who broke with Trump recently over the president's decision to bomb Iran's three nuclear sites this past weekend. The president has since left The Hague after spending less than 24 hours there for the NATO summit. The summit wrapped up Wednesday and Trump held a subsequent press conference. Air Force One, which had touched down on Tuesday at 7:36 p.m. local time, took off from Amsterdam Airport Schiphol shortly before 6 p.m. local time. The flight was expected to take more than six hours, putting Trump back at the White House on Wednesday evening.


The Guardian
39 minutes ago
- The Guardian
California violated Title IX by allowing trans athletes on girls teams, Trump administration says
The Trump administration has found that the California department of education and the state's high school sports federation violated civil rights law by allowing transgender girls to compete on girls sports teams. The federal education department announced the finding Wednesday and proposed a resolution that would require California to bar transgender women from women's sports and strip transgender athletes of records, titles and awards. It's the latest escalation in the Republican administration's effort to bar transgender athletes from women's sports teams nationwide. If California rejects the proposal, the education department could move to terminate the state's federal education funding. 'The Trump administration will relentlessly enforce Title IX protections for women and girls, and our findings today make clear that California has failed to adhere to its obligations under federal law,' Linda McMahon, the education secretary, said. 'The state must swiftly come into compliance with Title IX or face the consequences that follow. Title IX is a 1972 law forbidding sex discrimination in education. California education and sports officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment Wednesday. Federal officials opened an investigation into the California Interscholastic Federation in February after the organization said it would abide by a state law allowing athletes to compete on teams consistent with their gender identity. That followed an executive order signed by Donald Trump that was intended to ban transgender athletes from participating in girls and women's sports. In April, McMahon's department opened an investigation into the California department of education over the same issue. Both investigations concluded that state policies violated Title IX. The administration has been invoking the law in its campaign against transgender athletes, launching scores of investigations into schools, colleges and states. It's a reversal from the Joe Biden administration, which attempted to expand Title IX to provide protections for transgender students. A federal judge struck down the expansion before Trump took office in January. The administration's proposed resolution would require California to notify schools that transgender athletes should be barred from girls athletic teams and that all schools must 'adopt biology-based definitions of the words 'male' and 'female''. The state would also have to notify schools that any conflicting interpretation of state law would be considered a violation of Title IX. Athletes who lost awards, titles or records to transgender athletes would have their honors restored under the proposal, and the state would be required to send personal apology letters to those athletes. A similar resolution was offered to Maine's education agency in a separate clash with the administration over transgender athletes. Maine rejected the proposal in April, prompting a justice department lawsuit seeking to terminate the state's federal education funding. Under federal guidelines, California's education office and the sports federation have 10 days to come into compliance or risk enforcement action. The federation separately tested a pilot policy at a state track meet in May, allowing one extra competitor in three events featuring high school junior AB Hernandez, who is trans. The organization announced the change after Trump took to social medial to criticize Hernandez's participation. The justice department said it would investigate Hernandez's district and the state to determine if Title IX was being violated.