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BackKevin Warsh Fed Nomination Faces Senate Hurdles Over DOJ Investigation, Rate Policy Questions
Kevin Warsh Fed Nomination Faces Senate Hurdles Over DOJ Investigation, Rate Policy Questions
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NPR Business4/21/2026Politics2 min readUnited States

Kevin Warsh Fed Nomination Faces Senate Hurdles Over DOJ Investigation, Rate Policy Questions

Trump's Fed chair nominee to face confirmation hearing amid controversy over Justice Department probe of central bank and concerns about political independence

Quick Look

  • Kevin Warsh, President Trump's nominee for Federal Reserve chair, faces a contentious Senate confirmation process.
  • Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) plans to block the vote until the DOJ drops its investigation into the Fed, which critics say is a pressure campaign to lower interest rates.
  • Warsh will also face questions about his previous hawkish stance on rates versus his recent support for cuts tied to AI productivity gains, with Sen.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

The Federal Reserve operates independently from political pressure in setting monetary policy. This nomination comes amid unusual public pressure from Trump for lower interest rates and an ongoing DOJ investigation into the Fed that a judge called intimidation.

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Kevin Warsh, President Trump's nominee to serve as the next chair of the Federal Reserve, may face a tough fight for confirmation — partly over events for which he has no control. The Senate Banking Committee holds a confirmation hearing for Warsh on Tuesday — but already one GOP senator has said he will block a vote on the nominee until the Department of Justice drops an investigation into the Fed. Warsh will also likely face questions about inflation and borrowing costs and whether he can maintain his independence as Trump makes it clear he expects his next Fed chair to lead the charge to lower interest rates. Here are three things to know as the confirmation process begins.

Most of the drama has nothing to do with Warsh himself

A key member of the banking committee, Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., has promised to hold up confirmation of the nominee, but not because of any objection to Warsh himself. Tillis wants the Justice Department to drop its criminal investigation of the central bank and its current chairman, Jerome Powell. That probe is ostensibly about cost overruns on the Fed's headquarters renovation project. But Powell says it's really part of a pressure campaign by the Trump administration to get the Fed to lower interest rates, and a federal judge agreed, blasting the investigation as an unjustified act of intimidation. The DOJ has promised to appeal the judge's decision. By dropping its probe, the administration could win Tillis's vote and clear the way for Warsh's confirmation. But that hasn't happened yet.

Warsh has argued for lower interest rates, but it may not be so easy

Kevin Warsh previously served on the Fed's board of governors, and had a reputation as "hawkish," meaning he was cautious about cutting interst rates for fear inflation might get out of control But recently, he's argued that productivity gains from artificial intelligence could allow the central bank to lower interest rates while still keeping prices in check. Critics like Sen. Elizabeth Warren, the ranking Democrat on the banking committee, see that flip-flop as a sign that Warsh will take direction on rates from President Trump, even though the Fed is supposed to operate free from political pressure. "Warsh has really gone out of his way to demonstrate that he will be the sock puppet in chief," Warren told NPR. While past presidents have given the Fed wide latitude, at least publicly, in setting interest rates, Trump has been outspoken in demanding lower rates, raising concern that he could jeopardize the Fed's independence. Even if Warsh wants to lower interest rates, he may not be able to. Interest rates are set by a 12-member committee at the Fed, and many committee members are reluctant to cut rates until inflation is closer to the central bank's 2% target. The war with Iran and resulting spike in gasoline prices has made that a more challenging goal.

Warsh has also called for other changes at the central bank

If confirmed, Warsh could also seek to narrow the Fed's footprint in the economy. Warsh has criticized the Fed for straying beyond its statutory role of promoting stable prices and maximum employment. He's argued that the central bank should play a smaller role and that Fed leaders should talk less and stay in their lane.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • DOJ may drop investigation to secure Warsh confirmation

    Possible · Within weeks

  • Warsh confirmation hearing will focus heavily on Fed independence

    Very likely · Within days

  • Rate cuts unlikely in near term despite Warsh nomination

    Likely · Within months

Open Questions

  • Will DOJ drop the investigation to secure Warsh's confirmation?
  • Can Warsh maintain independence if confirmed?
  • Will the 12-member rate committee support rate cuts?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by NPR Business.

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