- Senator Elizabeth Warren, the top Democrat on the Senate Banking Committee, sent a letter to Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller Wednesday demanding he “immediately stop all work” on a proposal to consolidate back-office functions — including HR and IT — at the Fed’s 12 regional branches, warning the effort appears inconsistent with federal law and could erode the central bank’s decentralized independence.
- Warren called the proposal “a thinly veiled effort to please President Trump, who seeks additional power over regional reserve bank presidents” — the same presidents who have historically been more hawkish on inflation than Washington-based governors and are now signaling rate hikes, in direct contrast to Trump’s persistent calls for lower rates.
- Waller has framed his push as operational efficiency — consolidating shared services like HR and IT to reduce costs — but Fed officials and staffers across the system fear the real effect would drive decision-making power away from the regional banks toward Washington, making them more susceptible to political pressure from a board chair appointed by the president.
- Warren’s letter included 14 detailed questions asking Waller about the legal basis for his authority, how the framework was developed, whether he threatened to withhold annual budget approvals from non-compliant banks, and how centralization might impact staffing — with a July 16 deadline for response; the confrontation adds to a broader pattern of Trump administration pressure on the Fed that includes an attempted firing of Governor Lisa Cook and a DOJ criminal investigation into former Chair Jerome Powell.
What Happened?
Senator Warren sent a letter to Fed Governor Christopher Waller Wednesday, demanding he halt a proposal to consolidate certain back-office functions — human resources, IT — at the Fed’s 12 regional reserve banks. Waller outlined the vision in two spring speeches, saying the regional bank presidents had agreed to a framework for the consolidation. But Warren and Fed staffers argue that the regional banks are set up as largely autonomous entities under federal law, and that while Waller chairs the board’s reserve-bank affairs committee, he lacks authority to effectively centralize their administrative infrastructure. Warren framed the move explicitly as a political one: a vehicle for Trump to gain leverage over the regional bank presidents, who have been more resistant to rate cuts than Washington-based governors and are now openly discussing rate hikes to combat inflation.
Why It Matters?
The structural independence of the Federal Reserve’s regional banks is a deliberate feature of the 1913 Federal Reserve Act — a check on Washington’s control over monetary policy that has historically meant regional presidents can take more hawkish or dovish positions than the presidentially appointed board. In the current inflationary environment, that independence matters acutely: regional presidents are the loudest voices signaling that rate hikes may be necessary, directly contradicting Trump’s public demands for lower rates. Any erosion of the regional banks’ autonomy — including control over their own hiring and administrative operations — could over time make those presidents more dependent on Washington and more susceptible to political pressure. Warren’s letter puts Waller on record and creates a congressional oversight record ahead of any potential legal challenge.
What’s Next?
Waller has until July 16 to respond to Warren’s 14 questions. His answers — or any refusal to answer — will determine whether this escalates to formal congressional action, potential litigation over the proposal’s legality, or a public standoff between Congress and the Fed board. The broader context: the Trump administration has also tried to fire Governor Lisa Cook (blocked by the Supreme Court), conducted a DOJ criminal investigation into former Chair Powell, and proposed reforms to how regional bank presidents are selected. The Waller proposal, if it proceeds, would be the most structurally significant of those efforts — not a personnel action targeting one person, but a systemic change to how the entire Federal Reserve system operates.
Source: Bloomberg












