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Powell steps into spotlight as Supreme Court weighs Trump’s bid to remove Fed’s Cook

by January 20, 2026
by January 20, 2026

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell will attend Supreme Court oral arguments on Wednesday, a rare public show of institutional support as justices decide whether President Trump can fire Fed Governor Lisa Cook.

The case tests whether the president’s removal power overrides decades of Fed independence protections or whether Cook’s “for cause” defense holds water.

Powell’s appearance underscores the stakes for Fed independence

Powell’s attendance marks a symbolic escalation.

The Fed chair almost never appears at Supreme Court hearings, making his decision to sit in the courtroom a deliberate message: the institution views this case as existential.

His presence comes days after Powell disclosed that the Trump administration issued subpoenas to the Fed, threatening an unprecedented criminal investigation into Powell himself on allegations tied to a controversial headquarters renovation.​

That timing amplifies the institutional tension.

Experts warn that if the Court permits Cook’s removal, Powell’s own vulnerability increases substantially.​

Cook was appointed to her 14-year Fed term by President Biden in 2023.

In August 2025, Trump cited alleged mortgage fraud, in which Cook designated two homes as her primary residence on loan documents to secure better terms.

She has denied wrongdoing and faces no criminal charges.

Trump fired her on August 25, but Judge Jia Cobb blocked the removal on September 9, ruling Cook had a “substantial likelihood” of winning on the merits.

Justices face a fundamental question

The legal question is deceptively simple: can a president remove a Fed governor for alleged conduct before taking office, or only for actions during service?

Trump’s lawyers argue pre-office conduct is fair game, claiming mortgage fraud demonstrates unfitness for a financial regulator role.

Cook’s team counters that accepting pre-office conduct as grounds for removal guts the entire “for cause” protection, transforming Fed governors into at-will employees.​

Cook hasn’t been charged with any crime. Her lawyers describe the allegations as “manufactured” pretexts for policy disagreements, pointing out that Trump has repeatedly clashed with Fed decisions on interest rates.

The Supreme Court blocked lower-court rulings temporarily, but permitted Cook to remain in office while litigation proceeds.

That decision itself signals skepticism toward Trump’s removal effort. Yet the Court has shown sympathy for presidential removal authority in recent cases, leaving the outcome uncertain.​

112 years of unbroken independence

No president has ever removed a sitting Fed governor in the institution’s 112-year history.

A ruling for Trump would set a precedent that could reshape the Fed’s relationship with the White House permanently.

Former Fed and Treasury officials have warned the Court that permitting removal could trigger economic instability and erode public trust in central banking.​

For Powell, attending sends a clear signal: the Federal Reserve intends to defend its independence. Wednesday’s arguments will determine whether that defense holds.

The post Powell steps into spotlight as Supreme Court weighs Trump’s bid to remove Fed’s Cook appeared first on Invezz

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