google-site-verification=sVM5bW4dz4pBUBx08fDi3frlhMoRYb75bthh-zE8SYY Senate Democrats Move to Block Warsh Nomination Amid Fed "Intimidation" Concerns - TAX Assistant

Senate Democrats Move to Block Warsh Nomination Amid Fed “Intimidation” Concerns

By Tax assistant

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Senate Democrats Move to Block Warsh Nomination Amid Fed "Intimidation" Concerns

In a unified front, all 11 Democrats on the Senate Banking Committee are officially calling for a halt to the confirmation of Kevin Warsh, President Trump’s pick for Federal Reserve Chair. This move, spearheaded by Senator Elizabeth Warren, marks a major escalation in the battle over the independence of the U.S. central bank.

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The Conflict: “Investigation as Leverage”

The Democrats’ strategy focuses on the Department of Justice’s current investigations into sitting Fed officials. They argue that confirming Warsh now would validate what they call “political bullying.”

  • The Targets: The DOJ is currently investigating Chair Jerome Powell (over office renovations) and Governor Lisa Cook (over personal mortgage records).
  • The Allegation: Democrats claim these probes are “pretextual”—designed to pressure the Fed into cutting interest rates or forcing current leaders to resign.
  • The Demand: The committee letter insists that no hearings for Warsh take place until these investigations are closed.

A Narrow Path for Warsh

The nomination faces a mathematical nightmare in the Senate Banking Committee. With a slim Republican majority, the numbers are currently stalled:

  1. Unified Democrats: All 11 members are a firm “No” on proceeding.
  2. The GOP Wildcard: Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC) has joined the call for a delay, stating he won’t vote to move Warsh forward while the Powell investigation is ongoing.
  3. The Result: A potential 12-12 tie, which effectively keeps the nomination stuck in committee.

The Stakes

With Jerome Powell’s term set to expire in May 2026, the administration is in a race against time. If Warsh is not confirmed by then, the Fed could face a leadership vacuum or be led by an acting chair—an outcome that usually rattles global financial markets.