Warsh Must Confront Risks of Dissenting in His First Fed Vote

April 30, 2026, 10:03 PM UTC

When Kevin Warsh hosts his first meeting as the new chair of the Federal Reserve, he’ll face an immediate dilemma: Stare down White House demands for immediate interest-rate cuts, or stare down fellow policymakers who remain skeptical of the need to ease.

The unusual starting place raises the possibility that Warsh may eventually be forced to cast a dissenting vote against his colleagues to make his case heard.

Ordinarily, the idea of a Fed chair breaking from a consensus decision at the central bank would be almost unthinkable. Paul Volcker in 1986, G. William Miller in 1978 and Marriner Eccles ...

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