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Decision on nominating next Fed chair not ‘imminent', White House says

Decision on nominating next Fed chair not ‘imminent', White House says

Irish Times7 hours ago

The White House has said a decision on nominating the next US
Federal Reserve
chief is not 'imminent' after a report that
Donald Trump
could nominate a new chair as soon as this summer knocked the dollar.
'No Federal Reserve chairman decisions are imminent, although the president has the right to change his mind,' the White House said. 'The president has many good options for the next Fed chairman.'
The dollar on Thursday fell as much as 0.7 per cent against a basket of its trading partners, including the pound and the euro, hitting a level last reached in early 2022. It later rebounded to trade 0.5 per cent lower.
The move came after a Wall Street Journal report late on Wednesday that said the US president was considering announcing his pick to succeed Powell in September or October, or even as early as this summer. Such a decision would be earlier than usual.
READ MORE
Powell's term expires in May 2026, but the US president has become increasingly frustrated at the Fed's reluctance to cut interest rates amid concerns that
tariff
policies will trigger another bout of US inflation.
Trump said before the report on Wednesday that he knew 'within three or four people' who he was going to pick to head the US central bank, deriding Powell as 'terrible'.
Powell has insisted that politics do not play a role in the Fed's decision-making, which is focused only on reaching the central bank's mandates of achieving maximum employment and stable prices.
The White House has not confirmed who is in the running, but former Fed governor Kevin Warsh, US treasury secretary Scott Bessent, national economic council director Kevin Hassett and current Fed governor Chris Waller are considered leading candidates.
Waller said last week that he would back a rate cut as soon as July, contrasting with recent remarks by Powell signalling that borrowing costs should remain on hold as policymakers analyse the effects of Trump's tariffs on growth and inflation.
The US president's frequent attacks against Powell have revived speculation about Trump nominating his replacement early to serve as a 'shadow Fed chair' that would guide markets on what to expect following Powell's departure next spring.
'A candidate who is perceived as being more open to lowering rates in line with President Trump's demands would reinforce the US dollar's current weakening trend,' said MUFG senior currency analyst Lee Hardman.
The euro gained as much as 0.7 per cent against the dollar to $1.174 – its strongest level since September 2021 – after Nato allies in Europe pledged on Wednesday to raise defence spending to 5 per cent of GDP by 2035. The pound rose as much as 0.7 per cent to $1.376.
'The possibility of an early Fed chair announcement is one of the factors pushing the dollar lower today,' said Richard Yetsenga, chief economist and head of research at ANZ.
'On the European side, the confirmation of higher fiscal spending, in this case around defence, is also giving the euro a boost,' he added.
The dollar has weakened more than 10 per cent this year as the anticipated hit from the trade war and growing warnings about the sustainability of the US debt pile mix with concerns about Fed independence.
'The broader backdrop remains one where the perception is the US economy is slowing more quickly than the rest of the world, and that's been contributing to investor allocation out of the US,' said Yetsenga.
Kelvin Lau, senior economist for greater China and Asia at Standard Chartered, said the possibility of an early nomination for the next Fed chair 'has led to the belief that the Fed could shift to an earlier' interest rate cut, weighing on the dollar. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2025

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Zohran Mamdani shakes up directionless Democrats
Zohran Mamdani shakes up directionless Democrats

Irish Times

time39 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

Zohran Mamdani shakes up directionless Democrats

The man says he usually goes for walks on his lunch hour in Manhattan but on a furiously hot Wednesday it would be foolhardy, so he is sitting on a wall shaded by trees at the Columbus Circle entrance to Central Park. 'And where I am from, I like the heat,' he says, smiling. He speaks with a strong Indian accent even though he has been living in the city for decades. He lives in Jersey and commutes to the city to work. We chat for a while about the day's big events: he hope the Israel-Iran ceasefire will hold and believes that Donald Trump is sincere in his hatred for war. But he rolls his eyes and shakes his head at the mention of Zohran Mamdani's electrifying New York City Democratic Party mayoral primary victory the night before. 'I cannot understand why all of these people come here from the East if they do not want to enjoy capitalism,' he says. Mamdani, he predicts, would be a disaster if elected as mayor and would catapult the city back to the folkloric deprivations of the 1970s – the ghettos, the crime-stalked nights, the blackouts, the streets lined with uncollected rubbish. As it turns out, in his paean to capitalism, he is echoing the words of New York's biggest landlord. READ MORE 'You want to have leadership that speaks to what New York is,' Scott Rechler told the New York Times. 'It's the capital of capitalism.' [ This man could be just what the American left needs Opens in new window ] The scale of Mamdani's win over the returning patriarchal figure of Andrew Cuomo – who conceded defeat less than an hour after the polls closed on a broiling Tuesday night – has terrified the captains of industry and commerce. The late-night conservative talkshows forecast a future of New York entrepreneurs and wealth creators fleeing a city run by a socialist – or, as Trump has labelled Mamdani, 'a communist lunatic'. Cuomo's numbers were so disheartening that he has yet to confirm his intention to continue against Mamdani as an independent in the November vote. New York political affiliations are 6:1 Democratic. Mike Bloomberg was the last Republican mayor, and he threw his financial heft behind Cuomo's underwhelming campaign. By Wednesday, the Wall Steet Journal headline read: 'Wall Street panics over prospect of a socialist running New York City.' New York city mayor Eric Adams formally announces his re-election campaign. Photograph: Hilary Swift/New York Times They needed a saviour. But who could that blue-caped hero be? A familiar face, it turned out. Barely had the floor been swept after Mamdani's Tuesday night victory party at a rooftop bar in Long Island City than current mayor Eric Adams was charting the next phase of a wily political career. After meeting business leaders, he officially announced his campaign as an independent. In 2022 Adams was inaugurated as a Democratic mayor but his popularity plummeted after he was indicted on bribery and campaign finances charges, which were quashed by the Trump administration. Adams had dismissed Mamdani as a 'snake-oil salesman' at the beginning of the campaign, prompting the memorable New York Post headline 'Scamdani'. [ Eric Adams, the swaggering, 'weird' mayor of New York, is the first to face indictment in the office's 360-year history Opens in new window ] Adams has laid out the blueprint for the narrative behind his bid to return to office for a second term after a mayoral race that will intensify once the summer distractions of the Mets and Yankees are over with. To Adams, Mamdani is a princeling: a privileged son of academics voicing socialistic rhetoric and promising to cure the struggles of which he knows nothing. A Mamdani mayorship would, he warned, see a defunding of the city's police force and a rise in crime – and fear – among the 4.6 million subway users in the city's five boroughs. Free bus transport, childcare costs, rent control and a vision of city-owned price-controlled grocery stores featured strong in the Mamdani manifesto, which has propelled him towards the Democratic candidacy. He says corporate tax hikes and a tax raise for the wealthy will meet the costs of the policies. He has also vowed to end Adams's practice of co-operation with the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) raids to deport immigrants. Crime will rise, Adams warned. The money will leave the city. 'Most troubling is his calls to give everything away free. Nothing is more troubling when people are struggling [than making] promises that can't be lived up to.' Adams possesses a blue-collar triumph-over-adversity life-story, flipping a childhood of extreme poverty in late 1960s Bushwick and juvenile delinquency into a 20-year career in the police force followed by a political life where he navigated his way through the ranks with guile and persistence. His pitch will be that he has lived the struggles and life experience that Mamdani is purporting to champion. He will also stoke the fears of anti-Semitism that Mamdani has persistently rejected, arguing that he is pro-Palestinian. 'I think the Jewish community should be concerned,' he said this week. 'It is problematic when you have a socialist who is displaying anti-Semitic views to be able to run and be elected in New York City.' This hits hard. — Marjorie Taylor Greene 🇺🇸 (@mtgreenee) The Maga right has responded to Mamdani's triumph with predictable performative alarmism. Marjorie Taylor Greene reposted a digitally altered image of the Statue of Liberty shrouded in a black burka with the caption 'This hit hard'. Meanwhile, Tennessee Republican congressman Andy Ogle posted a copy of the letter he sent to attorney general Pam Bondi on Thursday requesting that Mamdani be investigated to establish if he should be subject to denaturalisation proceedings on the grounds that he may have procured US citizenship by 'concealment of material support for terrorism'. Mamdani has, during the course of a campaign for which he was a rank outsider just months ago, spoken of the racism he has faced since declaring himself in a field of 11 candidates. 'I get messages which say the only good Muslim is a dead Muslim. I get threats on my life, and on the people that I love, and I try not to talk about it. Because the function of racism, as Toni Morrison said, is distraction. My focus has always been on making this a city that is affordable, on making this a city that New Yorkers can see themselves in. And it takes a toll. 'Because this is a city that every single person deserves to be in, a city we all belong to and the thing that makes me proudest in this campaign is that the strength of our movement is built on our ability to have built something across Jewish and Muslim New Yorkers; across New Yorkers of all faiths, all backgrounds and all boroughs. 'Anti-Semitism is such a real issue in the city. And it has been hard to see it weaponised by candidates who do not seem to have any sincere interest in tackling [it] but rather in using it as a pretext to make political points.' Zohran Mamdani celebrates with his wife, Rama Duwaji, at a Democratic primary night gathering in New York on Tuesday. Photograph: Shuran Huang/New York Times In short, the November race will be riveting and personal and deeply unpleasant. And Mamdani's sudden emergence into the national spotlight, redolent of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez 's shock 2018 midterm win over Joe Crowley, presents the addled party with a new dilemma. Nimble and persuasive and inspiring as Mamdani's campaign was, he still earned just 430,000 votes. It's a mere 10th of the city's population. He will need to build on that if he is topple the Adams-led resistance to change. And there are cross-party concerns that Mamdani simply does not have the experience to run the mayor's office having entered politics just four years ago. Against that, his campaign, wedded to a clear vision and ideology based around the concerns of ordinary city workers, has cast in sharp contrasting illumination the muddled, directionless present of the Democratic Party as a whole. New York party grandees Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries both congratulated the 33-year-old on his win but have not formally endorsed him. Ocasio-Cortez supported him early and vocally. And a significant city show of support was offered on Wednesday by congressman Jerrold Nadler, whose constituency includes the influential and heavily Jewish Upper West Side of Manhattan. Nadler compared Mamdani's breakthrough as comparable to Barack Obama's day-star rise in 2008. 'Voters in New York City demanded change and, with Zohran's triumph we have a direct repudiation of Donald Trump's tax cuts and authoritarianism,' he said. Nadler's support will help to assuage doubts among the city's Jewish community. Primary election maps depicted Cuomo's successes in Manhattan as being limited to the Upper West and Upper East sides of the city, as well as the Bronx and the outer reaches of Queens. If Cuomo decides to bow out, Adams will seek to build on those boroughs. But a recent Marist poll showed Mamdani, despite his brandishing of Binyamin Netanyahu as a 'war criminal' during the campaign, had garnered 20 per cent support among Jewish New Yorkers intending to vote and now, Nadler has vowed to work with the candidate and with 'all New Yorkers to fight against all bigotry and hate.' An epic political autumn awaits New York.

Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu asks court to postpone his corruption trial
Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu asks court to postpone his corruption trial

RTÉ News​

timean hour ago

  • RTÉ News​

Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu asks court to postpone his corruption trial

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has asked a court to postpone his testimony in his long-running corruption trial, after US President Donald Trump called for him to be pardoned. In a filing to the tribunal, Mr Netanyahu's lawyer, Amit Hadad, said the Israeli leader's testimony should be delayed in light of "regional and global developments". "The court is respectfully requested to order the cancellation of the hearings in which the prime minister was scheduled to testify in the coming two weeks," the filing said. It said Mr Netanyahu was "compelled to devote all his time and energy to managing national, diplomatic and security issues of the utmost importance" following a brief conflict with Iran and during ongoing fighting in Gaza where Israeli hostages are held. Mr Trump, speaking yesterday, described the case against Mr Netanyahu as a "witch hunt". In a message on his Truth Social platform, Mr Trump said the Netanyahu trial "should be CANCELLED, IMMEDIATELY, or a Pardon given to a Great Hero", after the end of a 12-day war with Iran. Israel's opposition leader warned Mr Trump against interfering in Israel's internal affairs. "We are thankful to President Trump, but... the president should not interfere in a judicial trial in an independent country," Yair Lapid said in an interview with news website Ynet. Mr Netanyahu is Israel's longest-serving prime minister, having first become Israeli Prime Minister in 1996, aged 46, with the term lasting until 1999. He reassumed office in 2009 for a second term, lasting until 2021, taking up his third term in 2022. In the trial that has been delayed many times since it began in May 2020, Mr Netanyahu has denied any wrongdoing. In a first case, Mr Netanyahu and his wife, Sara, are accused of accepting more than €222,014 worth of luxury goods such as cigars, jewellery and champagne from billionaires in exchange for political favours. In two other cases, Mr Netanyahu is accused of attempting to negotiate more favourable coverage in two Israeli media outlets.

US approves funding for controversial Gaza aid group
US approves funding for controversial Gaza aid group

RTÉ News​

time2 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

US approves funding for controversial Gaza aid group

The US State Department has approved $30 million ($25m) in funding for the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the State Department has said, calling on other countries to also support the controversial group delivering aid in war-torn Gaza. "This support is simply the latest iteration of President Trump's and Secretary Rubio's pursuit of peace in the region," State Department deputy spokesperson Tommy Pigott told reporters at a regular news briefing. Reuters was first to report the move earlier this week. The United States has long backed the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation diplomatically, but this is the first known US government financial contribution to the organisation, which uses private for-profit US military and logistics firms to transport aid into the enclave for distribution at so-called secure sites. Israel starting in March blocked deliveries of food and other crucial supplies into Gaza for more than two months, leading to warnings of famine in the territory widely flattened by Israeli bombing since the 7 October 2023 attack on Israel by Hamas. The GHF, backed by armed US contractors with the Israeli troops on the perimeter, began operations at the end of May that have been marked by chaotic scenes, deaths and neutrality concerns . The Gaza health ministry says that since late May, nearly 550 people have been killed near aid centres while seeking scarce supplies. Since Israel lifted the 11-week aid blockade on Gaza, allowing limited UN deliveries to resume, the United Nations says more than 400 Palestinians have been killed seeking aid from both the UN and GHF operations. Earlier this month, GHF halted aid deliveries for a day as it pressed Israel to boost civilian safety near its distribution sites after dozens of Palestinians seeking aid were killed. The GHF, which is officially a private group, has denied that deadly incidents have occurred in the immediate vicinity of its aid points. GHF's executive director Johnnie Moore, an evangelical preacher who was a White House adviser in the first Trump administration, said in a post on X that the group has delivered more than 46 million meals to Gazans since it began its operations in May. Some US officials opposed giving any US funds to the foundation over concerns about violence near aid distribution sites, the GHF's inexperience and the involvement of the for-profit American logistics and private military firms, four sources told Reuters earlier this week. Major aid groups and the United Nations have refused to work with the GHF, saying it violates basic humanitarian principles by coordinating delivery with troops. The United States could approve additional monthly grants of $30 million for the GHF, two sources said, all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity. In approving the US funding for the GHF, the sources said the State Department exempted the foundation, which has not publicly disclosed its finances, from an audit usually required for groups receiving USAID grants for the first time. There is an acute shortage of food and other basic supplies after the nearly two-year military campaign by Israel that has displaced two million people in Gaza.

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