With the Fed chair's term expiring in days, President Trump has drawn a hard line: leave the building entirely — or get fired. What happens next could shake the foundations of U.S. monetary policy.
It was never supposed to come to this. Jerome Powell, once a Trump-appointed chairman celebrated for his steady hand, has become the most politically targeted central banker in modern American history. And now, with just days left before his chairmanship officially ends on May 15, the president has made his intentions crystal clear: get out completely — or face removal.
"Then I'll have to fire him. I've wanted to fire him, but I hate to be controversial."
— President Donald Trump, Fox Business
Speaking on Fox Business in a characteristically unfiltered interview, Trump escalated his months-long war of words with Fed Chair Jerome Powell to a direct ultimatum. The trigger? Powell has yet to confirm whether he will leave the Federal Reserve entirely after being replaced — and with two years remaining on his term as a Fed governor, he is technically entitled to stay on.
⚔️ Rates, Renovations, and Resentment
The feud between Trump and Powell runs deeper than a personality clash. At its core, it is a battle over the speed of interest rate cuts. Trump has long insisted the Fed is moving too slowly — coining the dismissive nickname "Too Late Powell" — and has demanded cuts of up to 3 percentage points from the current 4.25%–4.5% target range. Powell's more cautious approach, grounded in inflation concerns, has repeatedly frustrated the White House.
But the conflict took a darker turn with the emergence of a DOJ investigation into a staggering renovation of the Federal Reserve's Washington D.C. headquarters. What began as a ~$1.5B project has reportedly ballooned past $3 billion — an overrun of nearly 80%. Trump has not held back:
But the conflict took a darker turn with the emergence of a DOJ investigation into a staggering renovation of the Federal Reserve's Washington D.C. headquarters. What began as a ~$1.5B project has reportedly ballooned past $3 billion — an overrun of nearly 80%. Trump has not held back:
"Here's a man who took this little, tiny building and he's spending more than $3 billion. I want to know who the contractor is — that contractor is making billions, perhaps."
The Fed attributed the spiraling costs to unexpected complications — asbestos removal, toxic soil contamination, and a higher-than-anticipated water table. For Trump, the explanation falls short. He called it both "probably corrupt" and fundamentally "incompetent."
⚡ Key Facts At A Glance
▸ Powell's Fed Chair term expires May 15, 2026 — but he holds a governor seat for 2 more years
▸ Trump's nominee to replace him: former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh
▸ DOJ is investigating a $3B+ renovation of Fed HQ — ~80% over original budget
▸ Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) is blocking Warsh's confirmation until the probe concludes
▸ The Supreme Court has reaffirmed firing a Fed chair requires legal "cause" — not just policy disagreement
▸ Markets remain calm for now — but economists warn a forced removal could spike long-term rates
⚖️ Can Trump Actually Pull the Trigger?
The short answer: not easily. U.S. federal law permits removal of a Fed official only "for cause" — a standard legal experts widely interpret as requiring specific, demonstrable misconduct. Policy disagreements don't qualify.
The Supreme Court has reinforced this, affirming the Fed's unique independent status. When Powell was asked last year if Trump could fire him, his answer was blunt: "Not permitted under the law."
Yet the administration appears to be using the renovation investigation as a potential legal pathway — accusing Powell of lying to Congress about the project's costs. Two DOJ prosecutors even showed up unannounced at Fed headquarters to inspect renovation progress, only to be turned away by Fed attorneys.
🔄 Warsh Is Waiting — But Politics Are in the Way
Trump's preferred successor, Kevin Warsh, is nominated and ready. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Wednesday he expected Warsh to be confirmed "on time" — making the firing debate moot. But a critical obstacle remains.
Senator Thom Tillis has placed a hold on Warsh's nomination, refusing to let it advance until the DOJ probe concludes. In a twist of political irony, the very investigation Trump is driving is the same one delaying his handpicked Fed chair from taking power.
📊 What This Means for Markets
Markets have absorbed the political theater with surprising calm — so far. But economists warn that a forced or legally contested removal of the Fed chair could undermine the central bank's perceived independence — the very foundation of its credibility. A loss of that credibility could send long-term interest rates sharply higher, tightening financial conditions even as Trump demands the opposite.
For crypto and digital asset markets — which historically benefit from lower rate environments — the resolution of this standoff carries real weight. A smooth transition to Warsh, seen as more rate-cut friendly, could unlock fresh liquidity. A prolonged legal battle adds uncertainty at a delicate macro moment.
🔚 A Countdown Nobody Predicted
May 15 is fast approaching. Jerome Powell will cease to be Federal Reserve Chair. Whether he walks out the front door for the last time — or digs in as a governor for two more years — will determine whether this saga ends with a quiet handshake or a historic legal confrontation between the White House and the world's most powerful central bank.
Trump has made his position unmistakably clear. Powell, ever the institutionalist, has made his equally clear.
Something has to give. And in Washington right now, nobody is placing safe bets.
#FedRatesUnchanged #GoldRetracedToAround$4500 $BTC $BNB