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Fed not swayed by Trump pressure
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This is Washington Edition, the newsletter about money, power and politics in the nation’s capital. Today, senior editor Joe Sobczyk looks at the Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision and what it says about the central bank’s independence. Sign up here and follow us at @bpolitics. Email our editors here.

Decision Day

The Federal Reserve’s decision to cut its benchmark interest rate by a quarter-point today was, among other things, a testament to central bank independence.

Although President Donald Trump has been relentless in pressuring Fed Chair Jerome Powell to slash borrowing costs this year, the 12-member committee that sets rates followed the expected course with a much more normal-sized cut.

The vote count shows the committee was largely unified behind Powell’s measured approach to rates. The sole dissent came from Stephen Miran, the Trump economic adviser who was only confirmed to his seat on the Fed’s Board of Governors on Monday night and sworn in yesterday.

Trump’s been angling to increase his influence over the Fed. That effort has included an attempt to fire Fed Governor Lisa Cook over allegations she improperly took out mortgages on two homes, listing both as her primary residence.

But today’s decision may hint at the difficulty in securing a desired outcome simply by replacing members of the Fed’s board. Governors Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman, both of whom were appointed by Trump in his first term, have argued the Fed should have started cutting rates earlier.

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They were seen as possible dissenters today in favor of a larger move, after voting against the Fed’s decision in July to leave rates unchanged. But each stuck with the quarter-point reduction in the end.

During his news conference after the rate announcement, Powell noted that with 19 members on the Fed and 12 with voting power, a single governor would need to be “incredibly persuasive” to swing the outcome.

Miran, apparently, did not clear that bar.

Powell otherwise avoided wading into the political intrigue currently engulfing the Fed. He declined to comment on Cook’s ongoing court case over Trump’s bid to oust her. (The Trump administration said it intends to appeal to the Supreme Court to let him proceed, but a filing is still pending.)

The Fed chief also passed on directly addressing whether Miran merely being on  temporary leave from Trump’s Council of Economic Advisers while he serves on the Fed has any implications for the central bank.

“We’re strongly committed to maintaining our independence,” Powell said, “and beyond that I really don’t have anything to share.” —  Joe Sobczyk

    Don’t Miss

    Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent once agreed to occupy two different houses as his “principal residence,” the same kind of contradictory pledges that Trump has been using to try to oust Cook from Fed.

    Former CDC Director Susan Monarez said Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is seeking more changes to vaccination policy and sought to ensure her cooperation regardless of scientific evidence.

    A massive immigration raid on a battery plant in Georgia earlier this month continues to reverberate across the region with South Korean workers staying home and delays mounting.

    Steve Witkoff, the president’s special envoy for peace missions, has yet to divest his crypto assets, including a stake in the Trump family linked-World Liberty Financial.

    The judge handling Trump’s defamation lawsuit against the New York Times has issued several rulings that sought to reel in the regulatory authority of the US government.

    Average credit scores dropped, with Gen Z borrowers taking the biggest hit of any age group, in the worst year for US consumer credit quality since the global financial crisis.

    More college freshman are racing to land internships, aiming for an edge in a tough job market and anxious about how artificial intelligence will reshape entry-level work.

    Housing starts in the US decreased 8.5% last month to the lowest since May, as bloated home inventory slowed builders’ appetites to boost production.

    Republican anxiety over Trump’s trade policies has bubbled to the surface in the House as a small group of lawmakers pushed back on the president’s signature foreign economic policy.

    The Pentagon's cyber operations involve about 500 organizations and more than 70,000 personnel, creating the  potential for costly overlap and inefficiency, a GAO report says.

    Watch & Listen

    Today on Bloomberg Television’s Balance of Power early edition at 1 p.m., hosts Joe Mathieu and Kriti Gupta interviewed Emily Dickens, head of government affairs at human resources association SHRM, about the Fed and the state of the US job market.

    On the program at 5 p.m., they talk with Democratic Senator Tina Smith of Minnesota about government funding negotiations and the threat of political violence, and former State Department official Wendy Sherman about developments in the Middle East.

    On the Big Take podcast, Fed and US economy reporter Amara Omeokwe and host David Gura discuss what the central bank’s rate cut says about the state of the US job market, the broader economy and the central bank's independence. Listen on iHeart, Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

    Chart of the Day

    Vehicle manufacturing drove industrial production in the US higher in August thanks to Americans’ love for trucks. While auto assemblies fell to 1.21 million units at a seasonally adjusted annual rate from 1.37 million in July, trucks surged by 790,000 to 9.84 million. Over the past decade, car manufacturing — and sales — have decreased sharply in the US as consumer preferences for sport utility vehicles, which are generally classified as light trucks, continues to grow. —  Alex Tanzi

    What’s Next

    Initial jobless claims for the week ending Sept. 13 will be released on Thursday.

    Trump and China’s President Xi Jinping are scheduled to talk on Friday.

    A memorial service for Charlie Kirk, the slain conservative activist, is scheduled for Sunday in Arizona.

    United Nations high-level meetings convene in New York City beginning Sept. 22.

    Existing home sales for August will be reported Sept. 23.

    The August reading of the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge will be reported Sept. 26.

    The deadline for Congress to approve funding for government operations in the new fiscal year is Sept. 30.

    Seen Elsewhere

    • The Trump administration's battle against cartels smuggling fentanyl has created an opening for cocaine traffickers, who have found willing customers in the US, the Wall Street Journal reports.
    • The FAA didn’t heed warnings about the crush of air traffic at Reagan National Airport outside Washington before the deadly collision of a passenger jet and an Army helicopter, the Washington Post reports.
    • A deep-sea diving team has for the first time recovered artifacts from the Titanic's sister ship, the Britannic, which sank in the Aegean Sea after striking a mine during World War I, the Associated Press reports.

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