By Andrea Shalal and Bo Erickson
Jan 30 (Reuters) – President Donald Trump is expected to name a successor to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Friday after a White House meeting the previous day with former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh, a Fed critic who has said the U.S. central bank needs “regime change” to regain lost credibility.
Trump told reporters at the Kennedy Center on Thursday that he would announce his choice the next morning, and that it would be “somebody that could have been there a few years ago … I think it’s going to be a very good choice. I hope so.”
Warsh, 55, had met with Trump at the White House, a source later told Reuters.
In his first term, President Trump had passed over Warsh in favor of Powell, a choice he regretted when Powell would not cut interest rates as fast or deep as Trump urged.
This time around Trump made support for lower rates one of his explicit criteria for a Fed chair candidate. Warsh, like the other three people identified by Trump officials as finalists for the job, has said the Fed should be lowering rates more than it has.
Trump’s nomination of a Powell successor, who must be confirmed by the Senate, comes amid unprecedented presidential efforts to exert control over the Fed. Traditionally, the independence of the central bank from political pressure has been seen as key to its job to fight inflation.
Trump’s efforts include an attempt to oust Fed Governor Lisa Cook in a case now before the Supreme Court, and a Department of Justice probe that Powell says is part of a broad attempt by the administration to intimidate the Fed.
Powell’s chair term ends in May, and he has declined to say if he will take the unusual step of staying on as a Fed governor. Doing so would deny Trump another open Fed seat to fill and complicate the bank’s leadership under a new chair.
Powell’s term as a member of the Board of Governors expires in 2028.
Trump’s promise of an announcement on Friday came hours after he had said he would make his choice public next week.
A schedule for the president released by the White House late on Thursday did not point explicitly to such an event. The White House calendar for Trump showed a late-morning executive order signing session and a mid-afternoon policy meeting.
INTENSE SCRUTINY FOR WARSH
Trump’s Fed chair pick may face another challenge as well: One key lawmaker in Trump’s Republican Party, Senator Thom Tillis of North Carolina, has threatened to block any Fed nominees until the DOJ investigation is resolved.