Trump Says Warsh Would Have Lost Fed Nod If He Pledged Rate Hike

US President Donald Trump said he would have passed on Kevin Warsh as his nominee to lead the Federal Reserve if Warsh had expressed a desire to hike interest rates.

“If he came in and said, ‘I want to raise it,’ he would not have gotten the job, no,” Trump said Wednesday in an NBC News interview.

Most Read from Bloomberg

Chicago Office Tower Sells at an 87% Discount to Pre-Covid Price

In Praise of Urban Disorder

The Oklahoma Architect Who Turned Kitsch Into Art

Chicago Mayor Names Mahr as Interim Chief Financial Officer

The president said there was “not much” doubt the Fed would lower rates because “we’re way high in interest” but now “we’re a rich country again.”

Asked if Warsh understands Trump wants him to lower the benchmark rate, the president responded, “I think he does, but I think he wants to anyway.”

Trump’s comments could come up during Warsh’s confirmation process, where the Fed’s independence will likely be a central topic.

Republican Senator Thom Tillis, a member of the Banking Committee, has pledged to block any of Trump’s nominees to the institution until the Justice Department ends an investigation into the central bank’s renovation.

Outgoing Chair Jerome Powell has called the probe a thinly veiled attack on the Fed’s ability to independently decide monetary policy. Trump administration officials have denied that’s the intent, but the president has waged a months-long pressure campaign on Powell to lower rates.

Warsh, a former Fed governor, developed a reputation as an inflation hawk but has recently voiced support for lower rates.

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

Inside Xbox, a Game Studio Is Trying to Reinvent Itself

Carvana’s Red-Hot Growth Runs on a Cycle of Borrowed Money

Trump’s Attempt to Make Drugs Cheaper Is Pushing Up Prices in Other Countries

Industry TV Recap: A Tabloid Drama

Cognac Makers Are Uprooting Vines. Dumping Supplies May Be Next

©2026 Bloomberg L.P.

Scroll to Top