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How to convince Jerome Powell to leave the Fed? Take away his parking spot

Jerome Powell confirmed this week that he won’t leave the Federal Reserve next month after he steps down as chairman – but some of his detractors are already floating ideas on how to change his mind, On The Money has learned.

“My advice is to take away his parking privileges in the Fed building,” said one economist close to the White House and President Trump, adding that he wasn’t joking.

That’s after the 73-year-old Powell on Wednesday confirmed he will stay on as a member of the Fed’s Board of Governors after his term as chair expires May 15. He cited “legal attacks on the Fed, which he said are “battering the institution.”

Powell, who was referring to Trump’s efforts to prosecute him over allegedly misleading Congress about cost overruns in a $2.5 billion renovation of the Fed’s headquarters, is eligible to remain as a governor until early 2028.

While Powell and others including Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) have called the Fed HQ allegations “bogus,” some observers on Wall Street would nevertheless like to see Powell out of the central bank ASAP.

“Maybe they should also put his office in the basement of the Fed where water is seeping because of all the work they’re doing on the building,” the economist told On The Money.

How seriously the Trump Administration or Kevin Warsh, the president’s pick to succeed Powell, will take these suggestions is unclear.

A spokesman for the Fed had no comment. Approached for comment, a White House press rep pointed to a Truth Social post by the president that claimed, “Jerome ‘Too Late’ Powell wants to stay at the Fed because he can’t get a job anywhere else – Nobody wants him.”.

In fact, the key sticking point is the potential for an indictment over the Fed HQ issue by Trump’s Justice Department under Jeanine Pirro, people who know Powell tell On The Money.

“If everything is clean, he will leave shortly,” said one Wall Street executive with ties to Powell. “If there is some kind of litigation against him or the institution he will stay as a governor for up to two years.”

Pirro did little to help “clean” things up when, as she announced she was handing over the probe to the Fed’s inspector general, she added that she “will not hesitate to restart a criminal investigation should the facts warrant doing so.”

The problem is that Trump wants Powell out after sparring with him for years over his refusal to cut rates as quickly as the president would like. Warsh – known as an inflation hawk – may cut rates but also has vowed to reduce the size of the Fed’s balance sheet, which he believes has been a bigger culprit for inflation remaining above its 2% target.

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But the Fed chair can’t unilaterally achieve his agenda, particularly when it comes to interest rate cuts. He needs buy-in from the Fed’s policy-making Federal Open Market Committee, where Powell, if he should stay, will have a seat and could be a pivotal vote against cutting rates.

That is, unless Team Trump makes life miserable for him as governor.

“My betting is he might stay for a bit but will decide to leave,” said the same economist close to Trump who will recommend rescinding Powell’s parking space or parking his office in the basement.

Read original at New York Post

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