Senate Confirms Warsh to Fed Board, With Fed Chair Vote Likely Wednesday

May 12 (Reuters) – The U.S. Senate on Tuesday ⁠confirmed ⁠Kevin Warsh to a 14-year ⁠term as Federal Reserve governor, marking an important step toward his succeeding ​Jerome Powell as the U.S. central bank’s next leader.

Here are some details and context:

• The Senate is expected ‌to immediately start the confirmation process ‌for Warsh’s concurrent four-year term as Fed chair, holding a so-called cloture vote that starts a ⁠countdown toward ⁠approving him for the leadership post as soon as Wednesday. Powell’s term as ​chair ends on Friday.

• A lawyer, financier and former Fed governor, Warsh is on course to lead the Fed at a time when the central bank’s political independence is being tested by pressure from the administration ​to deliver the interest-rate cuts demanded by President Donald Trump.

• Trump’s unprecedented efforts to exert control ⁠over ⁠the Fed include the attempted ⁠firing of ​Fed Governor Lisa Cook in a case now before the Supreme Court and support for a Department of ​Justice investigation into Powell’s management ⁠of a building renovation that a federal judge ruled was pretext for pressuring Powell to cut rates or resign.

• The DOJ dropped its investigation, but its lead prosecutor in Washington says she could reopen it.

• Powell plans to take the unusual step of staying on as governor after his chair ⁠term ends, in response to the “series of legal attacks on the Fed which threaten our ⁠ability to conduct monetary policy without considering political factors.”

• Warsh says he plans “regime change” at the Fed, including tightening its coordination with the Treasury Department and the Trump administration on non-monetary policies and setting it on course for a smaller balance sheet, which he argues should allow for a lower policy rate.

• A surge in oil prices since the start of the Iran war has pushed up inflation and pared investor expectations for an interest-rate cut this year. Currently financial markets are pricing about a one-in-three chance ⁠of a rate hike by December. The Fed’s current target range for short-term borrowing costs is 3.50%-3.75%.

• The Fed chair has one of 12 votes on interest-rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee and is one of 19 voices at the policy-setting table.

• The Fed’s next meeting, ​likely its first chaired by Warsh, is scheduled for June 16-17.

(Reporting by Richard ​Cowan, writing by Ann Saphir;Editing by Dan Burns)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

Leave a Comment