Kevin Warsh, nominee for US Federal Reserve Chair, testifies throughout a Senate Banking Committee listening to on his nomination on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on April 21, 2026.
Mandel Ngan | Afp | Getty Photos
Kevin Warsh was confirmed Wednesday as the following Federal Reserve chair, taking up the central financial institution at a time when President Donald Trump is pushing for decrease rates of interest whilst recent inflation knowledge complicates the case for cuts.
In probably the most divisive vote ever for a Fed chair, Warsh, 56, received affirmation to take over for Jerome Powell, who has served within the prime management place since 2018 and whose time period will expire Friday.
The Senate voted 54-45 to verify Warsh, ending a monthslong saga that started in the summertime of 2025 and included an intensive seek for Powell’s successor. The vote was virtually fully alongside occasion traces, with solely Pennsylvania Democrat Sen. John Fetterman crossing over to vote for Warsh.
Trump has made no secret that he expects Warsh to decrease charges after having lashed out repeatedly at Powell for financial coverage the president has felt was too restrictive. Warsh was a part of a derby that included almost a dozen candidates at one level, together with present Governors Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman.
The affirmation comes, nevertheless, following separate reviews this week exhibiting inflation nicely above the Fed’s 2% goal and pipeline pressures accelerating at their highest ranges in additional than three years. Markets have been scaling again expectations for price cuts are even pricing in an opportunity of a rise later this yr.
Rep. French Hill, R-Ariz., praised the Fed’s choice and Warsh’s inflation-fighting credentials.
“Chairman Warsh has repeatedly emphasised the significance of putting affordability and worth stability on the middle of our financial agenda,” Hill mentioned in a press release. “His dedication to disciplined financial coverage will assist restore confidence in our economic system and assist long-term prosperity.”
This might be Warsh’s second stint on the Fed.
Throughout his first run, he served from 2006-11, a time throughout which Fed officers initially dismissed risks from the subprime mortgage meltdown that led to the worldwide monetary disaster, then applied a historic set of insurance policies geared toward rescuing the economic system. A part of these rescue endeavors included an unprecedented growth of asset purchases that despatched the Fed’s stability sheet previous $4 trillion, a program generally known as quantitative easing that Warsh argued then had gone too far.
Since leaving the Fed, Warsh has been a constant critic of financial coverage and final yr, in a CNBC interview, known as for “regime change” on the central financial institution. Through the interval, he is been a lecturer on the Stanford College of Enterprise and has served on varied boards of administrators.
Warsh takes the place of Stephen Miran on the Fed board, who was appointed to governor in September 2025 to fill the few months left on the unexpired time period of Adriana Kugler, who resigned unexpectedly in August.
Miran has dissented from every of the Federal Open Market Committee’s votes since taking the seat. When the committee voted to chop by 1 / 4 proportion level at every of final three conferences in 2025, Miran voiced assist for a bigger half-point reduce. This yr, he is opposed votes to maintain the federal funds price regular, arguing for quarter-point reductions.
Warsh’s first assembly as chair of the FOMC is scheduled for June 16-17.
He additionally would be the wealthiest Fed chair ever, with holdings nicely north of $100 million. As Fed chair, he’ll should divest himself lots of his investments beneath a strict new coverage applied since disclosures of questionable buying and selling practices amongst prime officers.

