President Trump is right to fire Federal Reserve Board Governor Lisa Cook. The argument rests not on policy disagreements, but on principle. Documents released by the HUD Secretary confirm that Cook falsely claimed two different properties as her “primary residence” within weeks in order to secure favorable mortgage terms. This conduct falls squarely within the category of misconduct and fraud. No bank executive would survive such a revelation, nor should a Federal Reserve Governor, who is entrusted with safeguarding the stability and credibility of the nation’s financial system.
The Federal Reserve Act is explicit: members of the Board of Governors serve fourteen-year terms “unless sooner removed for cause by the President.” That phrase, “for cause,” has an established meaning. It refers not to political or policy differences, but to misconduct, malfeasance, or corruption. Historically, this has been interpreted as a shield against arbitrary removal for monetary policy decisions, not a license to protect officials who engage in unethical or unlawful behavior. Fraud is cause. Dishonesty is cause. Conduct that undermines public trust in the institution is cause.
In June 2021, Lisa Cook took out a mortgage in Ann Arbor, Michigan, signing an agreement that she would occupy the property as her primary residence for at least one year. Two weeks later, she bought a condominium in Atlanta, Georgia, with another mortgage that included the same commitment. It is impossible to have two primary residences simultaneously. Within two months, she listed the Atlanta property for rent. This pattern fits the textbook definition of occupancy fraud. Federal law, specifically 18 U.S.C. §1014, makes false statements to financial institutions a felony. The Department of Justice has prosecuted many Americans for this very offense, with sentences ranging from fines to years in prison. Cook’s conduct, if proven, is no less serious.
CORRUPTION: US Federal Housing’s FHFA has referred Federal Reserve Governor Lisa D. Cook to the DOJ for mortgage fraud after she designated her out-of-state condo as her primary residence just two weeks after taking a loan on her Michigan home where she also claimed primary… pic.twitter.com/ACIBq8Qv9O
— @amuse (@amuse) August 20, 2025
Her defenders argue that only a court conviction could justify removal. This is mistaken. In the employment context, financial institutions do not wait for criminal trials before acting. If a bank executive lied on a loan application, they would be terminated immediately for cause. The Federal Reserve, which supervises banks and enforces ethical conduct upon them, cannot tolerate a double standard for its own governors. To allow Cook to remain would be to demand honesty from private bankers while excusing deceit at the very top of the regulatory hierarchy. Such hypocrisy would corrode the Fed’s legitimacy.
Cook’s attorney has claimed that the president lacks the authority to remove her. This is false. The Federal Reserve Act’s plain language grants the president that authority, conditioned on “for cause.” Moreover, under the unitary executive theory, executive power is vested solely in the president, who must be able to remove subordinate officers in order to ensure faithful execution of the laws. The Supreme Court has repeatedly affirmed that independence from politics does not mean immunity from accountability for misconduct. An official entrusted with economic stewardship cannot be shielded from consequences when her integrity is compromised.
The stakes are not abstract. The Federal Reserve derives its authority from public trust. That trust is fragile. It depends on the perception that those who wield immense power over the nation’s money supply, interest rates, and banking system are beyond reproach. If Americans come to believe that Fed governors can commit mortgage fraud without consequence, the institution’s credibility will erode. Credibility, once lost, cannot be restored by technical arguments or policy maneuvers. It is earned only through integrity.
Consider the example of corporate governance. Public companies demand that their executives disclose conflicts of interest, avoid even the appearance of dishonesty, and resign when ethical lapses occur. This standard exists not because every lapse is criminal, but because the trust of shareholders and the public depends on it. The Federal Reserve must hold itself to an even higher bar. To do less would be to invite cynicism, suspicion, and ultimately instability in the very markets it exists to steady.
Some will claim that firing Cook endangers the Fed’s independence. This is a category mistake. Independence in monetary policy does not mean impunity in personal conduct. A president who removes a governor for voting the “wrong” way on interest rates would indeed violate the principle of central bank independence. But a president who removes a governor for dishonesty is defending that principle. Independence is valuable because it protects economic decision-making from political whims. It is not a cloak for fraud.
The moral calculus is straightforward. If a rank-and-file bank teller lied on a mortgage application, they would be fired. If a regional Fed president engaged in ethically questionable stock trades, as happened in 2021, they would be pressured to resign, and indeed they did. If a Federal Reserve Governor commits mortgage fraud, the response cannot be silence. The higher the office, the higher the standard. Integrity is not optional, it is the foundation.
What a weird response pic.twitter.com/YNIEcWKvYM
— Pulte (@pulte) August 21, 2025
In this case, President Trump is not only within his rights, he is fulfilling his duty. The Constitution entrusts the executive with the responsibility to ensure that the laws are faithfully executed. The Federal Reserve Act empowers the president to remove governors for cause. Documents released by the HUD Secretary confirm that Lisa Cook falsely claimed two primary residences, and that constitutes cause. To shirk that responsibility would be to allow dishonesty to corrode one of the most vital institutions of government. To act decisively is to preserve its legitimacy.
In the end, this is not about politics. It is about trust, accountability, and the rule of law. The Federal Reserve cannot demand honesty from the banking system while tolerating dishonesty in its own ranks. It cannot preserve independence by ignoring corruption. President Trump’s decision to remove Lisa Cook is the right one. It protects the credibility of the Federal Reserve, affirms the principle that no official is above the standards they enforce, and ensures that those who oversee the nation’s financial system embody the integrity the American people deserve.
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She’ll pull the race card on you !
Whether or not Trump has the right, as the head of this country, to fire Cook is not the question. The Federal Reserve is an unconstitutional portion of our government. All it has accomplished since its creation in 1913, is to print money whenever the president and congress need it to support their overspending that has turned the U.S. money system into a worthless fiat enterprise that is the sole cause of inflation as a hidden tax on the American people.
AUDIT THE FED downsize
automate job in Fed
outsource
Downsize DC Hq