
The news keeps coming, even on a Tuesday at the end of August! President Donald Trump is keeping up a busy late-summer schedule, holding a three-hour-plus cabinet meeting while weighing in on issues as diverse as his effort to fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, the use of the death penalty in the nation's capital, and the engagement of Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift. Trump also indicated that he wants to rebrand the "one big beautiful bill" he signed into law last month to emphasize the tax cuts for working families in the legislation, including the partial elimination of taxes on tips.
Here's your fiscal update.
Trump Moves to Fire Fed Governor Lisa Cook
In a dramatic escalation of his campaign to gain more control over the nation's central bank, President Donald Trump announced Monday evening that he is firing Lisa Cook, a member of the Federal Reserve's board of governors, amid allegations that Cook committed mortgage fraud.
In a letter to Cook published on his social media platform, Trump declared that he is removing her from her position on the seven-member board for cause. Referring to an accusation made by Federal Housing Finance Agency Director William J. Pulte that Cook claimed two separate properties as her primary residence, Trump said "there is sufficient reason to believe you may have made false statements on one or more mortgage agreements."
Cook said she does not plan to step down. "President Trump purported to fire me 'for cause' when no cause exists under the law, and he has no authority to do so," she said Monday night, per the Associated Press. "I will not resign."
Cook has hired Abbe Lowell, a prominent criminal defense attorney, who said Trump's "reflex to bully is flawed and his demands lack any proper process, basis or legal authority." Lowell said Cook would be filing a lawsuit to challenge Trump's effort.
In a statement Tuesday, the Fed said it would abide by any court decision on the matter. The statement also pointedly noted that the executive has limited power over the central bank: "Congress, through the Federal Reserve Act, directs that governors serve in long, fixed terms and may be removed by the president only 'for cause.' Long tenures and removal protections for governors serve as a vital safeguard, ensuring that monetary policy decisions are based on data, economic analysis, and the long-term interests of the American people."
Serious legal questions: Trump has been pressuring the Fed to lower interest rates, claiming that the central bank's current rate policy is hurting the housing market and raising the cost of payments on the national debt, though critics suspect that Trump may also be interested in cushioning the economy from the negative effects of his tariff policy.
Either way, Trump's move raises serious legal questions about his power to shape the Fed. While the Supreme Court has granted Trump considerable leeway to fire agency heads that had previously been seen as more or less independent, the Fed is a separate issue. The president appoints the members of the Fed's board, but they cannot be removed, except for cause. Trump is claiming that the accusation against Cook provides sufficient cause, but many legal experts are skeptical that a single accusation from a supporter he appointed to his administration provides grounds for removal.
Lev Menand, a Columbia University law professor, told The Wall Street Journal that Fed officials cannot be fired for policy differences, and no president has ever tried to fire a Fed board member for any reason. "We're in pretty uncharted waters," he said.
Still, Trump's effort to fire Cook occurs in a gray area, a zone the president has spent a lifetime successfully exploiting. "The firing of Lisa Cook 'for cause' may be pretextual but is not obviously illegal," Jack Goldsmith, a law professor at Harvard University, wrote on social media. "The big question is how the markets react."
Economic and political issues: Markets showed relatively muted signs of concern Tuesday, with stocks rising modestly as the dollar fell and long-term U.S. bonds sold off, increasing the gap between short and long-term yields. This suggests that investors are worried to some extent about the potential loss of central bank independence, which could mean higher inflation in the long run as political leaders push for looser monetary policy.
"If successful, this [will be] an important dent in central bank independence," Marieke Blom, chief economist at Dutch bank ING, told the Financial Times. "People pay a high price via higher inflation and higher interest rates when central bank independence is lost."
Some saw a more serious threat. "It's a dark day for the central bank," said David Wilcox of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, per The Wall Street Journal. "This is going to cause tremors in the foundation that underpins monetary policy in the United States, and those tremors will be felt in financial markets domestically and around the world."
Trump's political foes sent an unmistakable message of concern. "This attempted firing shreds the independence of the Fed and puts every American's savings and mortgage at risk," Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said on social media.
Schumer called on the courts to stop Trump's "brazen power grab." Legal experts believe that the issue could well end up in front of the Supreme Court.
Whistleblower Warns on Social Security Data
Employees at DOGE - the Trump administration effort initially led by billionaire Elon Musk that aimed to slash public employment while bringing high-tech efficiency to the federal government - uploaded a massive Social Security database to an unsecure server in June, according to a whistleblower complaint filed by Chuck Borges, the chief data officer at the Social Security Administration.
The database includes personal details on more than 300 million Americans, including everything in a standard Social Security file such as name, address, date of birth and Social Security number.
Borges did not say that the database had been compromised, but the complaint alleged that there are no "audit or oversight mechanisms" regulating the use of the data file.
"Americans may be susceptible to widespread identity theft, may lose vital healthcare and food benefits, and the government may be responsible for re-issuing every American a new Social Security Number at great cost," the complaint says.
Borges also said that DOGE employees may have violated federal laws that protect sensitive data.
A spokesperson for the Social Security Administration said the agency was taking the complaint seriously.
Rep. Richard Neal of Massachusetts, the senior Democrat on the House Ways and Means Committee, said that DOGE's use of the database "is the danger we fear and warned of," adding, "All oversight has been lost, all accountability gone."
Richard Forno, an expert at the University of Maryland at Baltimore County Cybersecurity Institute, told The Washington Post that it looks like DOGE did not follow best practices in dealing with the data. "It's a cybersecurity failure, it's a management failure," he said. "This is not supposed to happen in a properly functioning government bureaucracy."
IRS Halts Layoff Plans
The IRS said late last week that it has halted plans to slash its workforce to 60,000, down from a headcount of about 100,000 at the beginning of the year.
Under President Trump, about 26,000 workers have been eliminated through incentives and layoffs, but the tax agency now says it may have cut too aggressively. "IRS has identified areas where staffing reductions created a potential gap in mission critical expertise," the acting human capital officer said in an email last week, per Government Executive .
Some planned layoffs have been terminated, and the agency may rehire some of the workers it lost. According to Axios , workers who have resigned but are still being paid have been told they can return to the agency without penalty.
Max Stier, president of the Partnership for Public Service, told Axios that the administration's effort to slash the IRS was chaotic and proceeded without an overall plan. "They realize that they're getting rid of people that they actually really need," he said.
Fiscal News Roundup
- Trump Says He's Removing Fed Governor Lisa Cook, Citing His Administration's Allegations of Mortgage Fraud – CNBC
- 'Uncharted Waters': Trump's Attempt to Take Charge of the Fed – Wall Street Journal
- Trump Weighs Quickly Announcing Nominee to Replace Lisa Cook on Fed Board – Wall Street Journal
- US Long-Term Debt Sells Off After Trump's Attempted Firing of Fed Governor – Financial Times
- Donald Trump Says He Wants to Rebrand His 'Big, Beautiful Bill' – NBC News
- Trump Threatens to Pull State Funds Over English Language Rule – Bloomberg
- EU Defends Digital Taxes After Trump Calls Them Unfair on US – Bloomberg
- With Little Explanation, Trump Throws Wind Industry Into Chaos – New York Times
- Judge Denies Maine Clinics' Request on Blocked Medicaid Funds – Roll Call
- UnitedHealth Ongoing Criminal Probe Is Broader Than Medicare – Bloomberg
- A US Tariff Exemption for Small Orders Ends Friday. It's a Big Deal to Some Shoppers and Businesses – Associated Press
Views and Analysis
- Trump vs. Fed Hits Critical Point: If He Can Fire Cook, Many Others Might Follow – Neil Irwin, Axios
- What the Federal Reserve, Supreme Court and Senate Need to Do After Lisa Cook's Firing – Jason Furman, New York Times
- Where's Your Evidence, Mr. President? – New York Times Editorial Board
- Trump Is Playing With Fire by Messing With the Fed – Matt Egan, CNN
- Why Markets Aren't Freaking Out Over Trump's Attack on the Fed – Nathan Tankus, Politico
- The Fed's Silence on Lisa Cook Will Erode Its Independence – Jonathan Levin, Bloomberg
- Firing Lisa Cook Won't Bring Down Interest Rates – Bloomberg Editorial Board
- Trump Vows to Impose Furniture Tariffs. What Would That Mean for Prices? – Max Zahn, ABC News
- The Backbone of the Global Auto Supply Chain Is at Risk From Trump's Tariffs – River Akira Davis, Jin Yu Young, Melissa Eddy and Hisako Ueno, New York Times
- Donald Trump's Madcap Crusade Against Wind – Ryan Cooper, American Prospect
- Trump Seems Pretty Socialist These Days – David M. Drucker, Bloomberg
- When Mamdani Says It, It's Socialism. When Trump Does It, It's Genius – Jim Geraghty, Washington Post
- This War on Expertise Thrills America's Enemies – Andreas Kluth, Bloomberg
- President Melds a Fractious Coalition: The Six Factions of Trumpworld – Natalie Allison, Washington Post