
Warren defends a former foe
President Donald Trump has flirted with the idea of firing Powell, ostensibly over an expensive renovation to the Federal Reserve building in D.C., although there's little doubt the real reason is his resistance to lowering interest rates. Warren, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Banking Committee, has been going to bat for Powell on TV and in a recent speech.
'The president has the capacity to fire everybody in his Cabinet. ... But he does not have the legal authority to fire the chairman of the Fed. The Fed is supposed to be independent,' Warren said on CNN Wednesday night.
Dumping Powell could crash the stock market, she said on MSNBC Thursday morning. 'If Donald Trump destroys [the Fed's independence], then he brings down those markets,' Warren said. 'He burns something of value to the United States.'
On Wednesday, Trump publicly backed off comments he reportedly made to congressional Republicans suggesting he might fire Powell — in part because lawyers warned him the dismissal might not hold up in court, POLITICO reported Thursday. Fed chairs can only be removed 'for cause,' and the legal experts doubted the pricey renovations to an aging office building would withstand legal scrutiny.
Warren's defense is an unlikely turn for the sole senator to vote against advancing Powell's nomination in 2017. Since then, Warren has remained a vocal critic of Powell. She's described him as 'a dangerous man' to lead the Fed, and in 2023 implied President Joe Biden should remove him from the position.
Warren's advocacy to prevent Powell's ouster, however, doesn't mean he's won her over. 'Independence does not mean impunity, and I have long pushed for more transparency and accountability at the Fed,' she said during a speech before economists Wednesday.
GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. TGIF!
TODAY — Gov. Maura Healey has no public events.
THIS WEEKEND — Norfolk County Sheriff Patrick McDermott, head of the Massachusetts Sheriffs Association, is on WBZ's 'Keller @ Large' at 8:30 a.m. Sunday. State Sen. Dylan Fernandes is on WCVB's 'On the Record' at 11 a.m. Sunday.
Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget for the Playbook?
DATELINE BEACON HILL
— Despite rapidly declining numbers and closure of hotels, Healey administration says emergency shelter system still in crisis by Samantha J. Gross, The Boston Globe: 'The number of families living in the state's once-overwhelmed emergency shelter system is half of what it was at its peak. Governor Maura Healey insists the costs, which ballooned to $1 billion last year, are coming down, and the government is six months ahead of its deadline to end the widespread use of hotels and motels as family shelters. But the Healey administration says the shelter system is still in crisis. State officials last Friday extended a formal emergency declaration, asserting that even though the number of families in shelter is below the cap set by the Legislature, the state still cannot keep up with the demand. Healey officials say they issued the declaration specifically so they can continue to impose restrictions on shelters, such as limiting who gets priority for beds and how long they can stay.'
— State lawmaker pleads guilty to drunk driving charges by Walter Wuthmann, WBUR: 'Watertown state Rep. John Lawn pleaded guilty to drunk driving charges on Monday in Boston Municipal Court after a not guilty plea had been previously entered on his behalf earlier in the morning. He admitted to driving under the influence and leaving the scene of a crash near the State House. Lawn faces fines, alcohol treatment and education and a 45-day driver's license suspension. Both charges will be continued without a finding if Lawn maintains a clean record a one year.'
House Speaker Ron Mariano told the Boston Herald's Joe Dwinell that it was 'aberrant behavior' for Lawn, who he believes will 'use this as a reset.'
Mariano also shut down one question that bubbled up after the Watertown representative reportedly told police he was coming from an event at the State House: 'He had not had a drink when we left the State House,' Mariano told the Herald.
FROM THE HUB
— Boston Mayor Wu touts office to housing conversion success, with 100-plus units under construction by Gayla Cawley, Boston Herald: 'Mayor Michelle Wu gleefully took a sledgehammer to the walls of an eight-story South Boston building to break ground on the city's largest office-to-residential conversion project to date, accounting for 77 of the 141 such units under construction. Wu, flanked by her planning and housing chiefs, key state elected officials, including ally Rep. Aaron Michlewitz, and developers behind the latest project, spoke to how Thursday's milestone marking the first 100 office-to-housing units under construction seeks to make a small dent in the city's housing crisis.'
— Parents' group sues over BPS exam school admissions, alleging discrimination against white students by Christopher Huffaker, The Boston Globe: 'A group representing parents whose children were denied admission to Boston's prestigious exam schools filed a lawsuit on Thursday against the school district, alleging racial discrimination by proxy in the schools' admissions system. The group, which also represents parents whose children plan to apply to the school, is seeking to block the district from continuing to use the admissions system the School Committee adopted in 2021 which divides the city up into socioeconomic 'tiers' students compete within. The lawsuits also ask that the group members' children who were denied admission to one or more exam schools be admitted to the school of their choice.'
— Greater Boston home prices surpass $1 million for first time in history by Zeninjor Enwemeka, WBUR.
PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES
— For T riders, the shutdown fatigue is real by Jeremy Siegel, GBH News: 'The slow zones are gone. The shutdowns are shorter. But T riders are still frustrated by the deluge of recent service changes that have forced riders off of trains and onto shuttle buses. For the second week in a row, the MBTA is closing down a key piece of the Red Line for three days. Starting Thursday at 8:30 p.m., trains won't run through Downtown Boston until Monday morning, with shuttle buses replacing service between Kendall/MIT and JFK/UMass as crews conduct routine maintenance work and track repairs.'
DAY IN COURT
— Massachusetts trash strike: Greater Boston cities, towns take Republic Services to court by Lance Reynolds, Boston Herald: 'Greater Boston communities at the center of the ongoing sanitation worker strike are taking Republic Services to court, seeking immediate relief as trash piles mount, attracting rats and giving off a sickening stench. Gov. Maura Healey is backing the six cities and towns that have filed a complaint in Essex County Superior Court, calling for the waste management giant to resolve its dispute with striking members of Teamsters Local 25.'
EYES ON 2026
— Rep. Seth Moulton draws a primary challenge after criticism over trans athlete remarks by Samantha J. Gross, The Boston Globe: 'Bethany Andres-Beck, a software engineer and Democratic activist, is launching a primary challenge to six-term US Representative Seth Moulton, who caught flak last year after he made remarks about how trans athletes and identity politics contributed to Democrats' November losses. Andres-Beck, who identifies as transgender, said that Moulton is 'exactly wrong on the strategy piece' when it comes to the transgender community, and that his comments are 'part and parcel of being out of touch with America.''
— Patrick Roath hopes to ride a youth movement into Congress and oust Stephen Lynch by Anthony Brooks, WBUR.
FALL RIVER FALLOUT
— Did Gabriel House ever conduct fire drills? Here's what Fall River inspection reports say by Dan Medeiros, The Herald News: 'Residents who were evacuated from Gabriel House assisted living facility after the deadly July 13 fire did not paint a pretty picture of the building. The city on July 16 and 17 released Building and Fire Department reports for the last several years. Despite residents' concerns, the documents show a facility that, though occasionally hit with bedbug and roach problems, was up to code and passed all fire safety inspections the last six years running — including holding fire drills, which some residents have claimed did not occur.'
— 10th victim dies from fire at Fall River assisted living facility via The Boston Globe.
FROM THE 413
— Chicopee native announces candidacy for at-large city councilor position by Namu Sampath, The Springfield Republican: 'A Chicopee native has thrown her hat in the ring for one of the vacant at-large city councilor positions. Jessica L. Avery, who works in credit union advocacy, announced her campaign in a statement Thursday. Avery's priorities include housing, support for veterans and seniors, and removing barriers to government access.'
THE LOCAL ANGLE
— Methuen seeks extension in police discrimination lawsuit by Teddy Tauscher, The Eagle-Tribune: 'After a judge ordered the city to produce 10 years of documents in a police discrimination lawsuit, city lawyers said they have located 600,000 new emails and attachments, equating to nearly a million pages, which must now be reviewed by outside counsel. In an emergency motion made on Tuesday, city attorneys asked for more time to examine the documents, which were supposed to be due to the court on July 15. On April 24, 2024, Methuen Detective Charles DeJesus filed a sweeping lawsuit claiming that for decades he and members of the community have been the victims of racial discrimination by the police department. The city has denied his allegations.'
— Liberty Gas looking for state approval to sharply increase rates for Attleboro area by Stephen Peterson, The Sun Chronicle: 'Liberty, the natural gas company for part of the Attleboro area — North Attleboro, Plainville and Wrentham, is looking for state approval to increase rates by a substantial amount and revamp its rate system. Liberty Utilities (New England Natural Gas Company) Corp., doing business as Liberty, has filed a petition with the state Department of Public Utilities for an increase in gas base distribution rates, according to a full page ad on page B7 in Friday's Sun Chronicle.'
— New Bedford woman denied bond at immigration hearing by Kevin G. Andrade, The New Bedford Light: 'A New Bedford mother of three was denied bond in immigration court Thursday — a decision likely related to a recent policy memo issued by ICE that disallows bonds for those who entered the U.S. illegally. Yury Melissa Aguiriano-Romero, 35, an asylum applicant from Honduras, was denied bond by Immigration Judge Natalie Smith during a hearing at Chelmsford Immigration Court regarding a reopened asylum claim.'
HEARD 'ROUND THE BUBBLAH
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Former Boston City Councilor Matt O'Malley, chief sustainability officer at Vicinity Energy, and Kathryn Niforos, communications director for Vineyard Offshore, welcomed Matilda Georgia O'Malley on July 1. Pic!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to former state Rep. Paul Schmid, former state Rep. Jeff Sanchez, Nate Everett, Sarah Iselin, Michael Bakshi, Emerson College lecturer Keri Thompson, Amy Sweeney, Eddie Flannery and Sarah Kashinsky.
HAPPY BIRTHWEEKEND — to Milton state Sen. Walter Timilty, Jordan Meehan, state Rep. Simon Cataldo and Google's Catherine Cloutier, who celebrate Saturday; and to Sunday birthday-ers to former state Rep. Eugene O'Flaherty, Krista Zalatores, Mass. native and POLITICO alum and David Giambusso.
Hashtags

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


The Hill
22 minutes ago
- The Hill
Former NPR CEO: ‘This has not been a great week for free speech'
Former NPR CEO Vivian Schiller criticized CBS's canceling of Stephen Colbert's show in a Saturday interview amidst pushback of a decision that the network said was made due to financial constraints. 'This has not been a great week for free speech and speaking truth to power, without a doubt,' Schiller said on MSNBC. CBS has garnered criticism for the move, which many took in the context of its decision earlier this month to settle a lawsuit brought by President Trump for $16 million. CBS's parent company, Paramount, is currently seeking federal approval for a merger deal with entertainment conglomerate Skydance. Colbert panned CBS's move afterwards, calling the settlement a 'big fat bribe' in his monologue and pointing out Paramount's merger effort. Paramount's lawyers had previously characterized the lawsuit, which took issue with CBS's editing of an interview with former Vice President Harris, as 'without basis in law or fact.' Schiller acknowledged Saturday that the evidence around the cancellation of 'The Late Show with Stephen Colbert' was 'circumstantial,' but still called the move 'curious.' The network has maintained that the decision was motivated by financial concerns. 'We have to also make note that Stephen Colbert is unafraid to, again, speak truth to power,' the former NPR executive said. 'He does it in a very bipartisan way over the years, and comedy and parody is an important part of a democratic ecosystem.' Schiller's comments come after a difficult week for NPR, the media organization she helmed for three years. Republicans voted to zero out funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, a nonprofit that provides a small slice of money to NPR's national headquarters and a significant portion of revenue for the broadcaster's member stations. Schiller told NPR's media reporter this week that she thought the loss of federal funds was inevitable, and that the network should have better prepared itself ahead of the vote by Congress. 'Any evidence-based news organization that reports critically is going to be accused of left-wing bias,' she said. 'Journalism and government funding in the United States — those two things are incompatible.' Schiller exited NPR in 2011 over her own controversy surrounding federal funding. Republicans at the time were threatening to cut the broadcaster's funding when video surfaced of a prominent NPR fundraiser attacking Tea Party activists.
Yahoo
32 minutes ago
- Yahoo
63 percent disapprove of Trump administration handling of Epstein files: Poll
More than 6 in 10 voters in a new poll (63 percent) disapprove of how the Trump administration handled its investigation into convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Just 17 percent of voters surveyed in the Quinnipiac University national poll released Wednesday said they were satisfied with the Department of Justice's (DOJ) conclusions that Epstein kept no client list and died by suicide while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges in 2019. Twenty percent had no opinion. Republicans, who have long fueled conspiracies about Epstein's associates and his death, were split — the poll found 40 percent approved of how the Trump administration carried out the probe, 36 percent disapproved and 24 percent had no opinion. Meanwhile, Democrats and independents overwhelmingly said they disapproved, at 83 percent and 71 percent, respectively. 'Epstein has been dead and gone for years but his tawdry legacy looms large in a country wanting to know more about who he knew and whether secrets have been buried with him,' Quinnipiac polling analyst Tim Malloy said in a statement. President Trump on Wednesday blasted supporters who have pushed for more information about Epstein's case after the FBI and DOJ revealed that their probe had ended with no new conclusions. 'Some stupid Republicans and foolish Republicans fall into the net, and so they try and do the Democrats' work,' Trump told reporters Wednesday. 'I call it the Epstein hoax. Takes a lot of time and effort. 'Instead of talking about the great achievements we've had … they're wasting their time with a guy who obviously had some very serious problems, who died three, four years ago,' he added. Additionally, 62 percent of voters surveyed in the new Quinnipiac poll said they had been 'somewhat' or 'closely' following news about the Epstein case. Quinnipiac surveyed 1,290 registered voters across the country July 10-14. The poll has a 2.7-point margin of error. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
33 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump tells GOP lawmakers he will likely fire Powell ‘soon'
President Trump indicated to Republican lawmakers that he plans to fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, a senior White House official told The Hill. The suggestion came during an Oval Office meeting Tuesday evening with a group of 11 hard-line House Republicans who revolted on the floor earlier in the day over concerns with a trio of cryptocurrency bills. 'The President asked lawmakers how they felt about firing the Fed Chair. They expressed approval for firing him. The President indicated he likely will soon,' the official said. A second source familiar with the matter confirmed that sequence of conversation. Asked about the reports emerging on Trump's thinking, the president in the Oval Office said it was 'not true' and walked back some of his sentiments in which he's teased firing Powell previously. 'I don't rule out anything but I think it's highly unlikely. Unless he has to leave, fraud,' Trump told reporters. The president was also pressed on if he has drafted a letter to fire Powell, which he said he has not. Markets dipped Wednesday as news reports emerged that Trump is moving closer to firing the Fed chair, with the S&P 500 falling into the red, CNBC reported. Trump has for months raged against Powell over the Fed's decision not to lower interest rates, a decision the chair has attributed to uncertainty around the president's aggressive use of tariffs. Top White House officials have in recent days shifted their focus to the cost of the Fed's renovations and Powell's testimony about it, raising questions about whether the president and his allies may try to oust Powell for cause before his term as chair expires next May. 'I think he's terrible. I think he's a total stiff. But the one thing I didn't see him is a guy that needed a palace to live in,' Trump told reporters Tuesday in Pennsylvania when asked if he would fire Powell. Asked if spending $2.5 billion on renovations to the Fed's Washington, D.C., headquarters is a fireable offense, Trump replied, 'I think it sort of is.' Any effort to remove Powell may face legal challenges. It's not clear the president has the authority to fire the Fed chair without cause, and Powell has repeatedly indicated he will not step down before his term ends. Updated 12:25 p.m. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.