Trump Asks Court to Let Him Fire Cook, Who Warns of Vote Turmoil
Lisa Cook
(Bloomberg) — President Donald Trump asked a federal appeals court to immediately pause a lower court decision blocking his ouster of Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, the latest sign that the administration wants to put the case on a fast track to the US Supreme Court.
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The Justice Department on Thursday asked a three-judge panel in Washington to grant a so-called stay order that most likely would allow Trump’s firing of Cook to take effect before the president’s appeal is formally heard.
The administration asked for a ruling by Monday, one day before the Fed’s board starts meeting to vote whether to lower interest rates. Cook can attend the meeting as long as the ruling remains in place.
Hours after Trump made his request for an immediate administrative stay, Cook’s lawyer filed a response urging the judge to deny it. Cook also requested a Sept. 18 deadline to file a separate response to Trump’s request for a longer-lasting stay pending appeal.
If accepted, that timeline would push any resolution of Trump’s stay request beyond the next Fed meeting, which Cook says she is busy preparing for.
“An administrative stay would threaten Governor Cook’s participation in next week’s meeting and potentially plunge the FOMC’s vote into turmoil,” her lawyer Abbe Lowell wrote in the filing. “In addition, it has the real potential of impacting domestic and foreign markets.”
If the appeals court denies the Justice Department’s request to immediately intervene, the president is likely to quickly ask the Supreme Court to consider the request.
Trump seeks to overturn a decision by US District Judge Jia Cobb, who ruled he likely did not have “cause” under the Federal Reserve Act to fire Cook over allegations she committed mortgage fraud before her 2022 Senate confirmation. Cobb also held that Trump likely violated Cook’s constitutional right to due process by attempting to fire her via a social media post that did not give her a meaningful opportunity to challenge the allegations.
“Even with the Federal Reserve’s unique structure and history, its governors are subject to removal for cause, and the president’s actions to remove Cook based on her misconduct should strengthen, not diminish, the Federal Reserve’s integrity,” the Justice Department said in its earlier filing.

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