Washington — The Justice Department opened a criminal probe into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell over testimony and cost overruns in the Fed's headquarters renovation, revelations that surfaced late Sunday and prompted political and market concerns. Republican senators including Thom Tillis signaled they would block Trump nominees until the investigation resolves, while Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent warned the president the probe could unsettle markets and confirmations. Global central bankers issued a Jan. 13 statement defending Fed independence, and several Fed officials publicly supported Powell. President Trump said he would name a nominee within weeks. Based on 6 articles reviewed and research.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
Global central banks, monetary-policy advocates, and defenders of institutional independence benefited by publicly reinforcing central-bank autonomy and rallying diplomatic and professional support for the Fed and Chair Powell, which may strengthen norms against political interference.
President Trump and his administration faced political and confirmation costs, while markets and nominees confronted short-term uncertainty and potential delays as the DOJ probe raised questions about oversight and politicization of monetary institutions.
DOJ investigation of Fed Chair Powell sparks backlash, support for Fed independence
The Philadelphia InquirerGlobal central banks rally after DOJ probes Powell
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