Tag Archives: MAGA

The Federal Reserve: Democracy’s Unexpected Guardian

Let us never forget that government is ourselves and not an alien power over us. The ultimate rulers of our democracy are not a President and senators and congressmen and government officials, but the voters of this country. – President Franklin D. Roosevelt

On January 11, 2026, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell delivered a stunning statement that crystallized a question many Americans may not realize they should be asking: Is the Federal Reserve the last major institution genuinely defending democratic principles in America?

Standing before cameras, Powell revealed that the Department of Justice had served the Fed with grand jury subpoenas threatening criminal indictment. The ostensible reason was his testimony to Congress about renovating Federal Reserve buildings. But Powell was direct about what was really happening: “This is about whether the Fed will be able to continue to set interest rates based on evidence and economic conditions or whether instead monetary policy will be directed by political pressure or intimidation.”

In that moment, the central bank of the United States became something more than a monetary policy institution. It became a test case for whether any American institution can resist President Trump’s political coercion over the next few years.

To understand why Powell’s statement matters, consider the landscape of American institutions today. The Supreme Court faces credibility challenges stemming from ethics controversies and a perceived ideological realignment. Congress operates in near-permanent partisan gridlock, struggling with basic functions like confirming appointments and passing budgets on time. State legislatures engage in aggressive gerrymandering and voting restrictions that challenge principles of equal representation. Executive power has expanded while norms of restraint have weakened across administrations.

Against this backdrop, the Federal Reserve maintained something increasingly rare: independence grounded in technical expertise and insulated from short-term political calculations. When President Trump repeatedly demanded interest rate cuts to boost the economy ahead of elections, the Fed held firm. When President Biden faced criticism over inflation, he publicly respected institutional boundaries. The Fed’s dual mandate of maximum employment and stable prices has required it to balance competing interests across the entire economy, forcing decisions that prioritize collective welfare over partisan advantage. Until now, that independence seemed relatively secure. Powell’s statement reveals it may be more fragile than Americans realized.

Powell’s January 11th statement is remarkable for several reasons. First, he explicitly connected the threat of criminal charges to the Fed’s monetary policy independence. He didn’t hide behind legal technicalities or bureaucratic language. He stated plainly that prosecution threats stem from the Fed “setting interest rates based on our best assessment of what will serve the public, rather than following the preferences of the President.” This is extraordinary transparency from an institution that typically communicates through carefully calibrated economic language. Powell used simple, direct terms: political pressure, intimidation, threats. He acknowledged that the ostensible reason for the subpoenas—his testimony about building renovations—was a pretext. He named what was happening.

Second, Powell invoked a principle larger than monetary policy: “Public service sometimes requires standing firm in the face of threats.” This isn’t the language of a central banker defending technical autonomy. It’s the language of someone defending an essential democratic principle, that institutions making decisions affecting all Americans should operate based on evidence and expertise, not political coercion. Third, Powell explicitly committed to continuing his work “with integrity and a commitment to serving the American people.” By framing his resistance as service to the public rather than institutional turf protection, he positioned the Fed’s independence as a democratic value rather than a technocratic privilege.

The Federal Reserve’s independence isn’t just about optimal interest rates or inflation targets. It represents a broader principle: that some decisions require insulation from short-term political calculations to serve long-term public welfare. When the Fed raises interest rates to combat inflation, it often creates short-term pain such as slower job growth, reduced business expansion, lower stock prices. Politicians facing elections have strong incentives to prioritize short-term stimulus over long-term stability. An independent Fed can make unpopular decisions that serve the country’s economic health over time.

This principle extends beyond economics. Independent courts can rule against popular sentiment to protect constitutional rights. Professional civil servants can implement policies based on expertise rather than political expediency. Scientists at government agencies can report findings that contradict administration positions. These institutional arrangements aren’t perfect, but they represent democracy’s attempt to balance popular sovereignty with expert judgment and long-term thinking. Powell’s statement suggests this balance is under direct assault, with the Fed potentially the last major holdout.

The Department of Justice subpoenas nominally concern Powell’s congressional testimony about Federal Reserve building renovations. Powell addressed this directly, noting that “the Fed through testimony and other public disclosures made every effort to keep Congress informed about the renovation project.” The suggestion that criminal charges might stem from routine congressional oversight testimony is itself remarkable, it criminalizes normal interaction between the legislative and executive branches. But Powell identified this as a pretext. The real issue is monetary policy that doesn’t align with presidential preferences.

This pattern using nominally legitimate legal mechanisms to pressure institutions making independent decisions represents a sophisticated form of institutional capture. It’s not crude interference like simply firing an agency head. It’s using the threat of criminal prosecution to reshape institutional behavior. The sophistication makes it more dangerous. It creates plausible deniability while achieving the same result: institutions become reluctant to make decisions contrary to executive preferences if doing so might expose their leaders to criminal investigation.

The Federal Reserve operates with more structural independence than most government institutions. Fed chairs serve fixed four-year terms that don’t align with presidential terms. Board members serve 14-year terms, ensuring continuity across administrations. The regional Federal Reserve bank structure distributes power geographically. These design features were intended to insulate monetary policy from political interference. If these protections prove insufficient—if the threat of criminal prosecution can bend the Fed to executive will then institutions with less structural independence have little chance of resisting similar pressure.

What happens to agencies making environmental regulations? To prosecutors deciding which cases to pursue? To intelligence agencies providing threat assessments? Democracy requires institutions that can tell truth to power. When the Environmental Protection Agency assesses climate risks, it needs to report findings honestly regardless of administration preferences. When the Congressional Budget Office scores legislation, it needs to provide accurate projections even if they contradict political claims. When courts rule on executive actions, they need to follow legal principles rather than political convenience. The Federal Reserve’s resistance to political pressure on monetary policy is part of this broader ecosystem of institutional independence. Its vulnerability suggests the entire ecosystem is at risk.

Jerome Powell cannot save American democracy alone. Even if the Federal Reserve maintains its independence on monetary policy, that doesn’t address court packing, voting restrictions, gerrymandering, or executive overreach in other domains. One institution resisting political capture doesn’t reverse broader democratic backsliding. Moreover, there are real tensions in celebrating the Fed as democracy’s guardian. The Federal Reserve is run by unelected officials making decisions with enormous consequences for ordinary Americans. Its most powerful body, the Federal Open Market Committee, operates with limited direct accountability. Unelected experts making consequential decisions without popular input can itself become anti-democratic.

The fact that we’re looking to an unelected central bank to defend democratic principles reveals how far other institutions have fallen. In a healthy democracy, Congress would check executive overreach, courts would protect institutional independence, and the civil service would resist improper political interference. That the Fed appears to be the last institution willing to publicly resist political coercion is an indictment of American governance, not just a testament to the Fed’s courage.

Powell’s statement creates several possible trajectories. The administration could back down (unlikely), recognizing that overtly criminalizing central bank independence would damage financial markets and America’s international credibility. Financial markets depend on confidence that U.S. monetary policy follows economic logic rather than political whim. International investors might flee dollar-denominated assets if they believe the Fed operates under political control. Alternatively, the administration could proceed with prosecution, testing whether public opinion, financial markets, or congressional action provide sufficient backstop to preserve Fed independence. This would transform an implicit crisis into an explicit constitutional confrontation. A third possibility is the subtler one: continued pressure without formal prosecution, creating uncertainty that gradually shapes Fed behavior. Board members might resign rather than face investigation. Future Fed chairs might be selected for political pliability. The institution might remain nominally independent while becoming practically captured.

The Federal Reserve’s independence ultimately depends on public support for the principle that some decisions should be insulated from short-term political pressure. Most Americans don’t follow monetary policy debates closely. But the principle that institutions should operate based on evidence rather than political coercion resonates beyond economics. Powell’s statement was unusually direct in part because he’s appealing beyond financial markets and policy experts to a broader public. He’s asking Americans whether they want institutions that can resist political intimidation or whether all government functions should answer directly to executive power.

This framing matters. If defending institutional independence becomes a partisan issue with one side supporting independent institutions and the other demanding political control then institutional independence has already lost. The Fed’s independence has survived because both parties recognized long-term benefits from monetary policy insulated from electoral cycles. Powell’s challenge is maintaining this bipartisan consensus at a moment when partisanship dominates and institutional norms have weakened.

There’s something appropriate in the Federal Reserve potentially becoming democracy’s last institutional defender. Central banks are unglamorous, technical, deliberately boring institutions. They don’t inspire passion or generate headlines under normal circumstances. They’re staffed by economists and lawyers making incremental decisions based on data and models. But democracy often depends on exactly these kinds of institutions. Not dramatic moments of resistance but everyday functioning of agencies that do their jobs professionally regardless of political pressure. Not heroic stands but consistent application of expertise and judgment independent of partisan considerations.

Powell’s statement was dramatic because it made explicit what usually remains implicit: that institutional independence requires constant defense, that political pressure is always present, and that resistance sometimes demands personal courage and public confrontation. The Federal Reserve may be the last institution defending these principles not because it’s special but because it’s one of the few with sufficient structural independence and public credibility to mount visible resistance. Its fight is everyone’s fight. If the Fed falls to political capture, the precedent suggests no institution is safe.

January 11, 2026 may be remembered as the day the question became explicit: Can American democratic institutions survive sustained pressure from political leaders willing to use criminal prosecution as a tool of institutional capture? Jerome Powell’s statement doesn’t answer that question. It simply acknowledges the question exists and declares his intention to resist. Whether that resistance succeeds depends on factors beyond the Federal Reserve—on Congress, courts, financial markets, public opinion, and the willingness of other institutional leaders to stand alongside the Fed in defending independence.

The Federal Reserve isn’t democracy’s savior. But in making public the political pressure it faces and explicitly refusing to capitulate, it’s doing what democratic institutions must do: operating based on evidence and principle rather than political intimidation. Whether other institutions find similar courage may determine whether American democracy survives its current crisis of institutional legitimacy. For now, the central bank stands. How long it can stand alone remains to be seen.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

Dr. King’s Dream is Dead: African America Must Focus On Its Own Institutional Sovereignty and Survival

“I fear I may have integrated my people into a burning house.” – Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

By William A. Foster, IV

For my parents and grandparents not many years ago, it was the White Citizens Council, Ku Klux Klan, Bull Connor, George Wallace, and more. Today, it is MAGA, ICE, Donald Trump, Charlie Kirk, and more. African America long held out hope that we would be in someway accepted into America’s fabric. We contributed centries of free labor capital, centuries of cultural capital, and did it all under an umbrella of racial terrorism. This hope was held without so much as an apology or reparation. The Civil Rights Movement of which much of my family was a part of from my mother’s letter to Dr. King himself that now sits in the archives of Boston College to part of our family that was forced to relocate to Jamaica by the US government, likely Hoover’s FBI. They fought for equal protections and equal opportunities, but it was and has always been a fool’s errand. A group in power will never voluntarily relinquish that power and European Americans are no exception to that rule. The problem is and has always been that only African America was fighting for reconciliation. It has been a dance between two dance partners where one is constantly stomping on the feet of the other, stealing money out of our pockets as they swirl us around, and smiling at us while putting a knife nine inches in our back and pulling it out six inches while calling it progress.

As a child, my sister and I had the privilege of attending Wee Care, an African American primary school in Prairie View, Texas in the town where our family’s illustrious HBCU, Prairie View A&M University is located and where my mother has taught students, developed faculty, and served in leadership for almost five decades. Unfortunately for us, the school only went up to the first grade at which time my mother was forced to choose her “best” option. My mother’s best option was an overwhelmingly European American Catholic school in the heart of Tomball, Texas, at the time a fairly known small Texas town – with all of the small town Texas dynamics when it came to race. Only my second and fifth grade teachers were nice to me. One was really young and the other a hippy. In sixth and seventh grade at another predominantly European American Catholic school I would experience the first time being called the N word by a fellow classmate. Even in the resulting aftermath of the fight I was blamed by the principal for being violent. Imagine that. The African American private schools were limited and given the distance from where we lived almost impossible for my mother to change us to an African American school where we would be culturally safe. That though was not the whole story. You see my classmates through elementary in particular were thought to be lifetime friends, but in my later years I would learn a valuable lesson from a graduate program I would attend in Boston at a Jewish institution. Do not confuse friendship and loyalty. I am thankful to this day for the lessons from that institution because it opened my eyes to so much in the world of navigating power dynamics. It was in those lessons that I realized that many of my so called friends from elementary were also loyal to causes that would see me and my family back on a plantation if the winds blew in the right direction and they saw no moral or ideological conflict.

From that point on, I realized that what I must lean into is the institutional development of my own people. From African America to the African Diaspora and that the connectivity of our institutions would be our strength and saving grace. But alas, many of us still yearned for acceptance into PWIs, European American corporations even though we do not think of them as such that is exactly who they are owned by when you examine their ownership, and predominantly European American neighborhoods. To access whiteness is seen as progress and success. In every place we lived, I largely remember us always being the only African American family in the neighborhood. Something I know that none of my childhood “friends” ever thought about or crossed their mind. Their families would never move into an African American community and be the only one. They saw our spaces as hostile even though we have always been overly welcoming even to our detriment, but as I said being the only African American family in a predominantly European American community was often seen as “progress” for many in our community. It was a mistake, a violent psychological mistake that still harms many of us to this day. The same way Ruby Bridges, a six-year old child, had to be escorted by Federal agents into a school because we assumed the fight for desegregation was making America true to its values. We were wrong then and we have been wrong about what Ameria’s values actually are.

Dr. King said in his famous speech, “I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed. We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal. I have a dream that one day out in the red hills of Georgia the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slaveowners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood. I have a dream that one day even the state of Mississippi, a state sweltering with the heat of oppression, will be transformed into an oasis of freedom and justice. I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by their character. I have a dream today. I have a dream that one day down in Alabama, with its vicious racists, with its governor having his lips dripping with the words of interposition and nullification; that one day right down in Alabama little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls as sisters and brothers. I have a dream today.”

The dream is dead. It was a dream that required two parties to reconcile their past with only one willing to do so while suffering the brutality that has persisted since 1619. Dr. King’s speech was given on August 28, 1963 and two weeks later on September 15, 1963, the KKK bombed 16th Street Baptist Church and killed four African American girls: Addie Mae Collins (age 14, born April 18, 1949), Carol Denise McNair (age 11, born November 17, 1951), Carole Rosamond Robertson (age 14, born April 24, 1949), and Cynthia Dionne Wesley (age 14, born April 30, 1949). My mother was born in 1949. It could have easily been her. There are countless African American deaths at the hands of racial terrorism that we will never know about. The Red Summer of 1919 when the most African Americans (on record) were lynched. An entire Civil War just decades prior was waged over whether or not the United States should or should continue to be a country rooted in the slave economy. The complexity by which the North and South were guilty of profiting from – looking at you Harvard and others and have never rectified. The bloodshed, terror, and violence has been endless and it has not receded.

“I wouldn’t give it no more thought than wringing a cat’s neck! And there ain’t a court in Mississippi that’d convict me for it.” Frank Bailey’s, a character in Mississippi Burning, quote in regards to killing African Americans. This is and has been America’s attitude towards African America in its entirety. Not just individuals, but our institutions and communities as well. The underfunding of HBCUs or the burning of countless towns from Rosewood to Tulsa, our death and demise is sport and entertainment. African America has constantly believed that we could appeal to the morality of fellow Americans and “Christians”. We could work hard enough and show them our humanity. Imagine us thinking we need to prove to them we were hard working, civil, or human. It is both comical and insulting. But like many centuries ago, we have since the end of the Civil Rights Movement returns to working hard for everyone but ourselves and our institutions. That time needs to be over and we need to return to the principles and efforts that built towns like Rosewood, Greenwood, 100 HBCUs, 100 African American boarding schools, and over 500 African American owned hospitals. It is time to abandon any hope that peace can be achieved. Our sovereignty and survival is all that matters going forward. There are no more olive branches to be had. Not even from those that call themselves moderates or liberals because far too often we have seen them fall silent or pushed us to assimilate into spaces that did not empower us, did not provide institutional ownership to us, and often were spaces that were paternalistic and just as hostile to us as their conservative cousins. No, there are no more olive branches to be had because our survival depends on it.

Dr. John Henrik Clarke, a noted Pan-African historian, and someone who I consider an unofficial mentor said that any African American who is looking to devise a plan must look at our communities as nation-states and therefore must consider these fundamental pillars:

How will my people be housed?

How will my people be educated?

How will my people be fed?

How will my people be defended?

The answers to these questions can no longer be grassroots, they have to be institutional and they have to be thought about in a way that recognizes that our sovereign nation-state is adjacent to an adversary who has and will invade us. It is not a question of if they will, but when will they because they have so many times before. Unfortuantely, we cannot ask Dr. King what his thoughts about his “Dream” for America would be today because at the age of 39 he was assassinated. He was assassinated three years after his contemporary Malcolm X was assasinated and five years after Medgar Evers was assassinated in his driveway. Medgar Evers just two months before the “I Have A Dream” speech would take place. He was not blind to what America was for African America and he was certainly not blind to how our adversaries saw us or the lengths they were willing to go to in order to silence us. For the last 50 plus years since Dr. King’s passing African America has tried to make a peace that we should now see is not possible. It is time for the Dream Redefined and that dream should start and stop with actions that provide for the institutional sovereignty and survial of African America period.