The U.S. Senate confirmed Kevin Warsh as the next chair of the Federal Reserve on Wednesday, setting the stage for a leadership transition at a pivotal moment for monetary policy and financial markets.
Warsh was confirmed in a 54-45 vote that largely split along party lines, though Democratic Sen. John Fetterman joined Republicans in supporting the nomination. He will serve a four-year term as Fed chair alongside a 14-year appointment to the central bank’s Board of Governors.
The former Fed governor officially succeeds Jerome Powell on May 15, inheriting a central bank grappling with elevated inflation, slowing economic momentum and growing geopolitical uncertainty tied to ongoing conflict in the Middle East.
Warsh also assumes leadership amid mounting pressure from the Trump administration to lower interest rates despite persistent inflationary pressures. Markets have increasingly focused on whether the Fed will maintain its cautious stance or begin easing policy later this year.
During testimony before the Senate Banking Committee last month, Warsh sought to reassure lawmakers about the central bank’s independence. “I would maintain Fed independence and take politics out of monetary policy and monetary policy out of politics,” Warsh said during the hearing.
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