- Key insight: The White House has appealed a lower court ruling granting Federal Reserve Gov. Lisa Cook an injunction that allows her to remain at her post pending the outcome of her lawsuit challenging the president's moves to fire her.
- What's at stake: The appeals process, even if expedited, is unlikely to affect Cook's participation in the Federal Open Market Committee's next meeting, which takes place Sept. 16-17.
- Forward Look: The suit is likely to make its way to the Supreme Court, and the outcome of the high court's decision on the legality of Trump's efforts to fire Cook could have dramatic implications for the political independence of the Fed.
The White House is appealing a federal district court ruling earlier this week that allows Federal Reserve Gov. Lisa Cook to remain at her post on the Fed board pending the outcome of her lawsuit challenging her purported removal by the president.
Attorneys representing President Trump notified the D.C. District Court on Wednesday that they intended to appeal a Tuesday night ruling that found that the president's reasons for removing Cook do not meet the long-understood definition of "cause," which in turn serve as grounds to grant Cook's motion for an injunction to allow her to remain at her post pending the outcome of the case. An appellate brief from the White House has not yet been filed with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.
The pace of federal appeals, even on an expedited basis, means Cook is likely to remain on the Fed board for the next Federal Open Market Committee meeting, which is scheduled to be held on Sept. 16 and 17. The FOMC is widely expected to cut interest rates by 25 basis points in light of new employment data showing a softening labor market.
Cook's purported removal from office came after Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte sent a criminal referral to the Department of Justice in August alleging that Cook had claimed primary residence on two separate mortgages taken out within weeks of each other in 2021 — before she was nominated and confirmed by the Senate to serve on the Fed board. Pulte later
Cook promptly
Trump's attorneys countered in their response to the lawsuit that the president has expansive power to define "cause," and that the courts lack jurisdiction to question whether those definitions are sufficient. The D.C. District Court judge overseeing the case ruled on Tuesday night that the "for cause" protections as understood by Congress when the clause was added to the FRA in 1935 would not have been compatible with the president's expansive view, and thus
The suit is almost certainly destined for a hearing by the Supreme Court, which has taken a more expansive view of the president's power to remove independent regulators than prior courts. The Supreme Court in 2020
But in a May ruling allowing those other officials to remain sidelined pending the outcomes of their cases, the Supreme Court