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Kevin Warsh Faces Senate Grilling Over Fed Chair Confirmation
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BBC News4/21/2026Politics2 min read

Kevin Warsh Faces Senate Grilling Over Fed Chair Confirmation

Democratic senators clash with Trump nominee over Epstein ties, financial holdings and accusations he would be president's "sock puppet"

Quick Look

  • Kevin Warsh's confirmation hearing for Federal Reserve chairman turned contentious as Democratic senators, led by Elizabeth Warren, questioned his independence from President Trump and probed his financial holdings and connections to Jeffrey Epstein.
  • Warren called Warsh a potential "sock puppet" for Trump, while senators pressed on his $100m+ investment fund and Epstein-related financing.
  • Trump stated he would be "disappointed" if Warsh didn't cut rates immediately.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Kevin Warsh, a former Fed governor appointed by George W. Bush, was nominated by Trump to replace Jerome Powell as Federal Reserve chairman. The hearing took place amid ongoing debates about central bank independence and concerns about political interference in monetary policy.

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Kevin Warsh has clashed with Democratic senators during a fiery confirmation hearing to decide whether he should be installed as Federal Reserve chairman. From suggestions that he would be President Donald Trump's "sock puppet" to questions over his links to paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein, here are the key takeaways from Tuesday's showdown in the Senate. Senator Elizabeth Warren, the ranking Democrat on the banking committee that is overseeing his confirmation, said Warsh would be little more as Fed chairman than Trump's "sock puppet". Trump has suggested that, if confirmed, Warsh would conform to his agenda and lower interest rates, which the president argues is necessary to boost the US economy. Warren said that "having a sock puppet in charge of the Fed would give the president access to the Fed's powerful authorities to enrich himself, his family and his Wall Street buddies". Asked whether he would indeed be the president's sock puppet, Warsh said: "Absolutely not." The former Fed governor said the independence of America's central bank "is essential" and vowed that he would be committed to preserving its self-governance. Warsh has disclosed hundreds of millions of dollars in financial holdings, including an investment fund worth at least $100m (£74m), in which the underlying assets have not been detailed. "Do the [funds] invest in any companies affiliated with President Trump or his family, companies that have facilitated money laundering, Chinese-controlled companies or financing vehicles established by Jeffrey Epstein?" Warren asked. Warsh declined to answer the question directly, but said he planned to divest his holdings if and when confirmed as Fed chairman. His name crops up several times in the justice department's Epstein files, though simply appearing in the records does not imply wrongdoing. Warsh used Tuesday's hearing to deny having agreed a deal with Trump to cut interest rates in return for being offered the job. "The president never once asked me to commit to any particular interest rate decision, period, and nor would I ever agree to do so if he had, but he never did," he said. Senator Ruben Gallego, an Arizona Democrat, said that the Wall Street Journal had reported last year that Trump had pressed Warsh at a meeting to reduce borrowing costs. Tuesday's hearing began just after Trump was asked in an interview on CNBC if he would be disappointed if Warsh failed to immediately cut rates. "I would," said the president. The Fed interest rate affects everything from mortgages and car loans to business borrowing. Tillis, who is not running for re-election, said he actually backs Warsh's appointment to the role, praising his "extraordinary credentials". But the North Carolina senator said he wants an inquiry into outgoing Fed chairman Jerome Powell to be dropped before he will vote to approve his successor. Tillis said the cost overruns, while "unfortunate", were "legitimate", noting the structural issues with the existing building and the rising cost of construction materials. Powell plans to remain in post beyond the date his term ends, 15 May, if Warsh is not confirmed. Tillis's ongoing blockade could make that prospect a reality. Warsh came to the hearing armed with a plan to overhaul how the Federal Reserve measures inflation and communicates policy changes with the public.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Tillis will likely drop his blockade after political concessions, allowing Warsh confirmation

    Likely · Within weeks

  • Warsh will face continued scrutiny over Epstein connections even if confirmed

    Very likely · Within months

Open Questions

  • Will Warsh's financial holdings create ongoing conflicts of interest?
  • Will Tillis actually block the confirmation?
  • How will markets react to a politically contested Fed chair appointment?

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This article was originally published by BBC News.

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