
President Donald Trump on Wednesday flayed his Fed chairman, mocking Jerome Powell’s insistence that he wouldn’t bow to political pressure when determining monetary policy.
“We have a man that doesn’t do anything for us,” Trump said in a wide-ranging interview on Fox Business Network’s “Mornings with Maria,” contrasting Powell’s decision to hike interest rates with the policies of places like China and Europe.
Trump has repeatedly hammered Powell over his rate hikes, prompting the Federal Reserve chairman to say in a speech on Tuesday that he would resist the political pressure emanating from the White House and the president’s Twitter feed. A day after Trump accused Powell of acting like a “stubborn child” for not cutting interest rates last week, Powell defended the central bank’s insulation from politics — a signature facet of the U.S. financial system — saying that the nation’s founders aimed to avoid “the damage that often arises when policy bends to short-term political interests.”
Trump argued to host Maria Bartiromo on Wednesday that Powell “should’ve never raised the [interest] rates to the level that he raised them,” complaining that the Fed was constraining economic growth. And when Bartiromo brought up Powell’s remarks, the president responded with ridicule.
“So now he’s trying to prove how tough he is because ‘he’s not gonna get pushed around,’” Trump said mockingly. “Here’s a guy — nobody ever heard of him before, and now, I made him, and he wants to show how tough he is.”
And though Powell has halted rate hikes for the time being, saying last week that the Fed stands ready to cut rates, Trump continued to ratchet up his criticism.
“Let him show how tough he is — he’s not doing a good job,” Trump said, adding that he was being “nice about it.”Trump constantly complains that Powell has not pursued the same kind of easy money policies of countries like China, arguing that Beijing’s currency devaluation keeps the U.S. from being on a level playing field when it comes to negotiating trade deals.
His frequent criticisms have given way to rumors that Trump may try to fire or demote Powell, something he denied Wednesday even as he insisted he had the right to do so.
Article originally published on POLITICO Magazine