Business
Senate Confirms Trump Adviser Stephen Miran to Federal Reserve Board Amid Independence Concerns
The U.S. Senate has confirmed Stephen Miran, a top economic adviser to President Donald Trump, to the Federal Reserve’s governing board in a narrow 48-47 vote that largely followed party lines. The confirmation, which comes just two days before the central bank is expected to lower interest rates, hands the White House greater influence over monetary policy at a critical moment for the economy.
Miran, a member of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, was advanced by the Senate Banking Committee last week with unanimous Republican support and Democratic opposition. On the Senate floor, only Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski broke ranks with her party to vote against his appointment. He will serve out the remainder of a term ending in January, following the unexpected resignation of Adriana Kugler on August 1.
The appointment has stirred debate over the Fed’s tradition of independence. During his September 4 confirmation hearing, Miran said he would continue in his White House role but take unpaid leave while serving on the board. That stance drew sharp criticism from Democrats, who argued it undermines the Fed’s autonomy from political influence.
“Stephen Miran has no independence,” Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said before the vote. “He would be nothing more than Donald Trump’s mouthpiece at the Fed.”
Miran, however, pledged to act independently, saying: “I will act independently, as the Federal Reserve always does, based on my own personal analysis of economic data.” He added that if appointed to a longer term, he would resign his White House post. Previous presidential advisers, including former Fed chair Ben Bernanke, resigned their administration positions before joining the board.
Miran’s confirmation comes as Trump has sought broader changes to the central bank. His attempt to remove Fed governor Lisa Cook, appointed by former President Joe Biden, was blocked by a federal judge who ruled the administration lacked cause for her dismissal. An appeals court rejected the government’s request to overturn that decision earlier this week.
The developments at the Fed coincide with an uncertain economic outlook. Inflation remains above the central bank’s 2 percent target, even as hiring slows and unemployment has edged up to 4.3 percent. Economists expect the Fed to trim its key interest rate to around 4.1 percent from 4.3 percent at the conclusion of its policy meeting on Wednesday, though Trump has publicly pushed for much steeper cuts.
With Miran now joining the Fed board, the administration has secured a stronger voice in shaping monetary policy just as the central bank weighs how to balance persistent inflationary pressures with a cooling labor market.
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