Warsh’s confirmation wasn’t just another vote.
It was a shot across the bow of America’s financial establishment.
Trump’s long, bitter feud with Jerome Powell has finally produced a successor-in-waiting — and a looming test of Federal Reserve “independence.”
As a criminal probe clouds Powell’s final days, a Trump-aligned economist prepares to steer trillions.
Kevin Warsh’s return to the Federal Reserve isn’t a routine homecoming; it’s the centerpiece of a calculated struggle over who truly controls America’s money.
Backed by Trump and embraced by allies as a “stable reformer,” Warsh arrives with both
establishment credentials and a clear mandate to challenge the status quo on rates, regulation, and the Fed’s swollen balance sheet.
His pledge of independence before senators — insisting Trump never asked him to “fix” interest rates — sets up a tense, high‑stakes experiment.
Can a president’s favored adviser really stay above politics while holding a 14‑year seat that outlasts multiple administrations?
With Powell weakened by a criminal investigation and Trump openly musing about Fort Knox and the nation’s gold, Warsh’s every move will be read as a signal: is
