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Powell says he would not resign as Fed chief if Trump asked for his resignation

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Thursday that he will not step down if President-elect Donald Trump asks for his resignation.

When asked whether he would resign if requested to by Trump, the Fed chair simply said: “No.” Powell subsequently told reporters that the president does not have the power to fire or demote him.

“Not permitted under the law,” Powell told reporters at a news conference, after the Fed cut interest rates by a quarter percentage point

Investors will be closely watching the president-elect’s contentious relationship with the Fed chair. Trump appointed Powell in 2017, but repeatedly lashed out against the central bank chief during his first term as president, arguing Powell was not easing monetary policy quickly enough.

Trump said in an October interview that the president should be able to weigh in on interest rate decisions.

“I don’t think I should be allowed to order it, but I think I have the right to put in comments as to whether the interest rates should go up or down,” Trump told Bloomberg News at the Economic Club of Chicago on Oct. 15.

As Covid-19 swept the nation in March 2020, Trump claimed the authority to remove Powell from office. The Fed chair’s term ends in 2026.

Fed Chair Powell on whether the president has the power to fire him: 'Not permitted under the law'

Powell also said Thursday that Trump’s election victory this week will not have any immediate impact on the central bank’s policy. 

“In the near term, the election will have no effects on our policy decisions,” Powell told reporters.

The Republican Party also won a majority in the Senate in Tuesday’s election. If the GOP takes the House of Representatives as well, Trump should have an easier path to pass his economic agenda. 

Steve Mnuchin, Trump’s former Treasury secretary, said the president-elect will likely focus on cutting taxes and imposing tariffs, particularly on China.  

Powell said the next administration’s policies could have an economic effect that would impact the Fed’s dual mandate of maximum employment and price stability. But it is still too early to tell and the Fed is not making any assumptions, Powell said. 

“It’s such an early stage,” Powell said. “We don’t know what the policies are, and once we know what they are, we won’t have a sense of when they’ll be implemented,” he said.

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