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Court grants Trump new power to fire officials, but not Fed’s
Los Angeles Times
|June 30, 2026
The Supreme Court on Monday gave President Trump new power to fire the heads of most independent agencies created by Congress — but not the Federal Reserve.
MARK SCHIEFELBEIN AP THE SUPREME Court blocked the firing of Fed Governor Lisa Cook.
Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. announced two opinions, one of which bolstered the president’s power as the chief executive and a second which said this authority did not extend to the Federal Reserve board.
The first was a 6-3 decision that had the support of five conservatives, while the second had a 5-4 majority that included the three liberals.
Roberts, a former White House lawyer, has long been skeptical of independent agencies whose officials may wield regulatory power in conflict with the views of the president.
Since the 1880s, however, Congress has at times created independent agencies led by a bipartisan board of experts. In 1935, a unanimous Supreme Court had upheld these multimember boards and commissions.
But Roberts and the court overturned that precedent and declared it conflicts with the executive power of the president.
“Our Constitution creates three branches, but only one President,” he wrote. “To discharg[e] the duties of his trust, the President must have the assistance of officers he can trust. ... Subordinates who exercise the President’s power are subject to removal by him. Then, and only then, can they remain accountable to the President, and the President to the people.”
The decision upholds Trump’s firing of Rebecca Slaughter, one of two Democratic appointees on the five-member Federal Trade Commission.
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