logo
Trump presses Fed's Cook to quit after mortgage fraud allegation

Trump presses Fed's Cook to quit after mortgage fraud allegation

IOL News10 hours ago
Trump said Wednesday that Cook 'must resign now,' citing Pulte's allegations, while the FHFA head posted on social media that the accusations give Trump 'cause to fire' her.
Image: Bloomberg
President Donald Trump called on Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook to resign after a staunch ally called for an investigation of the board member's mortgages, intensifying his campaign on the central bank.
Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte urged Attorney General Pam Bondi to investigate Cook over a pair of mortgages, the latest in a series of moves by the Trump administration to increase legal scrutiny of Democratic figures and appointees. Cook was nominated to the Fed by former President Joe Biden.
Trump said Wednesday that Cook 'must resign now,' citing Pulte's allegations, while the FHFA head posted on social media that the accusations give Trump 'cause to fire' her.
The dollar declined, yields pared losses and gold rose after Trump's call for Cook's ouster.
Pulte wrote a letter to Bondi and Justice Department official Ed Martin on Aug. 15 suggesting that Cook may have committed a criminal offense. The letter, which was first reported by Bloomberg News, alleges that Cook 'falsified bank documents and property records to acquire more favorable loan terms, potentially committing mortgage fraud under the criminal statute.'
The Justice Department has received the letter, according to an official, who declined to elaborate further.
Video Player is loading.
Play Video
Play
Unmute
Current Time
0:00
/
Duration
-:-
Loaded :
0%
Stream Type LIVE
Seek to live, currently behind live
LIVE
Remaining Time
-
0:00
This is a modal window.
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.
Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque
Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps
Reset
restore all settings to the default values Done
Close Modal Dialog
End of dialog window.
Advertisement
Next
Stay
Close ✕
Ad loading
A resignation would create another opening for Trump to fill on the Fed board, potentially tipping the balance of Republican appointees to four of its seven members.
The president has explicitly said that he'll only pick a successor to Fed Chair Jerome Powell who agrees that borrowing costs should come down, a demand that has already raised questions about whether a new chair can credibly preserve the bank's independence.
Trump's administration has also pursued mortgage fraud allegations against high-profile Democrats, including California Senator Adam Schiff and New York Attorney General Letitia James. Both are longtime political foes of Trump.
The Cook referral expands that effort to the Fed, as Trump allies — including Pulte — press the US central bank to lower rates and Powell to resign before his term as chair expires in May.
No charges have been filed and it's not clear whether Bondi will investigate. The Justice Department declined comment. The Federal Reserve declined comment. Cook did not respond to requests for comment late Tuesday.
BLOOMBERG
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

California Senate embarks on Democrats' redistricting plan, counter-punch to Texas
California Senate embarks on Democrats' redistricting plan, counter-punch to Texas

Daily Maverick

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Maverick

California Senate embarks on Democrats' redistricting plan, counter-punch to Texas

By Steve Gorman California Democrats, led by Governor Gavin Newsom, are pushing to achieve fast-track passage of their redistricting effort in the Sacramento statehouse by Friday, just in time to place it on the ballot for a special election on November 4. Newsom, who enjoys a Democratic super-majority in both houses of the state legislature, ultimately seeks voter support of his plan – neutralizing a Trump-backed Texas bill designed to flip five Democratic seats to Republican control in the U.S. House of Representatives. The newly drawn district lines in Texas would go into effect without voter approval, though Democrats have vowed to challenge it in court. The Texas measure cleared a major hurdle on Wednesday when the state House of Representatives in Austin adopted it on an 88-52 party-line vote. The Texas House and Senate, both controlled by Republicans, still must reconcile two versions of the legislation before it goes to Republican Governor Greg Abbott, who said he will sign it. Republicans, including Trump, have openly acknowledged the Texas effort is about boosting their political clout, helping preserve the party's slim U.S. House majority in the November 2026 midterm races. That election already is shaping up as a closely fought contest for congressional control. Democrats and civil rights groups say the new Texas map further dilutes the voting power of Hispanics and Blacks, violating federal law that forbids redrawing political lines on the basis of racial or ethnic discrimination. In pursuing redistricting in mid-decade, both sides are breaking with long-observed political custom of generally altering political maps once every 10 years, following the U.S. Census to adjust for population changes. TEXAS WALKOUT GALVANIZED DEMOCRATS 'Why are we here? Because congressional redistricting is allowed,' Texas Representative Todd Hunter, a prime sponsor of the Republican bill, said before its passage. Consideration of the Texas bill was delayed for two weeks after more than 50 Democratic state House members staged a walkout that temporarily denied Republicans the legislative quorum they needed to proceed. Their collective absence sparked extraordinary efforts by Abbott and other Republican leaders to pressure the Democrats to relent, including civil arrest warrants, the imposition of fines and threats to withhold their pay. The wayward Democrats finally returned to Austin on Monday, by which time their legislative boycott had galvanized Democratic leaders in other states, especially California, where Newsom has vowed to 'fight fire with fire.' 'We're going to punch this bully in the mouth, and we're going to win,' Newsom told reporters in a video conference call on Wednesday. 'This is about the rule of Don versus the rule of law.' He was joined on the call by the Democratic National Committee chair, Ken Martin, along with New Jersey U.S. Senator Corey Booker and Texas Representative Nicole Collier, one of the leaders of the Austin walkout. 'These are the most segregated maps that have been presented in Texas since the 1960s,' said Collier, who represents a predominantly non-white Forth Worth state district. Collier, who spent two nights sleeping in the statehouse rather than submit to police escorts assigned by Republican leaders to newly returned Democrats, said she was forced to clandestinely join the Zoom call from a restroom of the Capitol building, then abruptly leave the call when she was discovered. A visibly shocked Booker remarked: 'Representative Collier in the bathroom has more dignity that Donald Trump in the Oval Office.' The Texas-California clash may be just the start. Other Republican-controlled states — including Ohio, Florida, Indiana and Missouri — are moving forward with or considering their own redistricting efforts, as are Democratic-led states such as Maryland and Illinois. In California, the focus is on a package of three measures. One would allow the legislature to temporarily bypass the state's independent, bipartisan redistricting process, adopted by voters in 2008. The two others consist of the redistricting plan itself and the measure to establish a special election giving voters final say over the new map. In a victory for Democrats, the California Supreme Court on Wednesday swiftly rejected an emergency petition filed this week by four Republican state lawmakers seeking to block legislative action on Newsom's redistricting plan for 30 days.

Trump admin better-placed than courts to release Epstein files: judge
Trump admin better-placed than courts to release Epstein files: judge

TimesLIVE

time2 hours ago

  • TimesLIVE

Trump admin better-placed than courts to release Epstein files: judge

A US judge said on Wednesday that the Trump administration is in a better position than federal courts to release materials that would satisfy public curiosity about the late financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein's sex trafficking case. In rejecting the justice department's bid to unseal records from the grand jury that indicted Epstein in 2019, Manhattan-based US district judge Richard Berman wrote that the 70-odd pages of materials the grand jury saw paled in comparison to the 100,000 pages the government has from its Epstein investigation but is not releasing. The judge said the bid to persuade him to unseal the records was an apparent distraction from the justice department's decision in July not to release its files and directly cited another judge's decision earlier this month not to release similar materials from the grand jury that indicted Epstein's longtime girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell. 'The instant grand jury motion appears to be a 'diversion' from the breadth and scope of the Epstein files in the government's possession,' Berman wrote. The justice department did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Berman's decision came as President Donald Trump has faced criticism from his conservative base of supporters and congressional Democrats over the justice department's decision not to release the files from its Epstein investigation. Epstein died by suicide in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges. He had pleaded not guilty. His death in jail and his friendships with the wealthy and powerful sparked speculation that other prominent people were involved in his alleged crimes and that he was murdered.

Trump admin better-placed than courts to release Epstein files, judge says
Trump admin better-placed than courts to release Epstein files, judge says

TimesLIVE

time5 hours ago

  • TimesLIVE

Trump admin better-placed than courts to release Epstein files, judge says

A US judge said on Wednesday that the Trump administration is in a better position than federal courts to release materials that would satisfy public curiosity about the late financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein's sex trafficking case. In rejecting the justice department's bid to unseal records from the grand jury that indicted Epstein in 2019, Manhattan-based US district judge Richard Berman wrote that the 70-odd pages of materials the grand jury saw paled in comparison to the 100,000 pages the government has from its Epstein investigation but is not releasing. The judge said the bid to persuade him to unseal the records was an apparent distraction from the justice department's decision in July not to release its files and directly cited another judge's decision earlier this month not to release similar materials from the grand jury that indicted Epstein's longtime girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell. 'The instant grand jury motion appears to be a 'diversion' from the breadth and scope of the Epstein files in the government's possession,' Berman wrote. The justice department did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Berman's decision came as President Donald Trump has faced criticism from his conservative base of supporters and congressional Democrats over the justice department's decision not to release the files from its Epstein investigation. Epstein died by suicide in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges. He had pleaded not guilty. His death in jail and his friendships with the wealthy and powerful sparked speculation that other prominent people were involved in his alleged crimes and that he was murdered. Trump, a Republican, had campaigned for a second term in 2024 with promises to make public Epstein-related files, and accused Democrats of covering up the truth. But in July, the justice department declined to release any more material from its investigation of the case and said a previously touted Epstein client list did not exist, angering Trump's supporters.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store