WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has spent his second term bulldozing elected and appointed officials who resist him or refuse to bend to his demands. But he may have met his match in Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.
As the Trump administration ramps up its pressure campaign against the central bank — now including Justice Department subpoenas and the threat of criminal charges — Senate Republicans have closed ranks around Powell, defending an independent Fed chair under attack from a president of their own party.
''I know Chairman Powell very well. I will be stunned — I will be shocked — if he has done anything wrong,'' said GOP Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana, one of Trump's most reliable allies in the Senate.
Soon after the Justice Department served subpoenas on the Fed, Powell went on the offensive, releasing a video statement accusing the administration of using ''pretexts'' to pressure the central bank into sharply cutting interest rates, as Trump has demanded. The 72-year-old Fed chair also leaned on Capitol Hill relationships he has cultivated since his 2018 appointment, holding multiple calls with Republican senators in the days following the video's release.
''He knows his way around Congress,'' said Robert Tetlow, a former senior policy adviser at the Fed. ''He gets in there, pets the dog, shoots the breeze, and has a way of getting people to like him, and he's really good at it.''
For some in Congress, it's personal
In a March 2024 hearing, Powell received an unusual greeting from a member of the Senate Banking Committee: The office dog had said hello.
''Gus sends his regards,'' said Sen. Thom Tillis, a North Carolina Republican. ''If you have time after the hearing, you ought to go by and see him.''