In a dramatic intervention, the US Supreme Court has overturned President Trump’s attempt to dismiss a Federal Reserve governor, a move that British investors and policymakers had warned would destabilise global markets. The court ruled 6-3 that the president lacked the authority to fire a central bank governor without cause, upholding a century-old precedent that protects the Fed’s independence.
The decision comes after Trump fired Governor Deborah James in February, accusing her of pursuing an “aggressive inflation-fighting agenda” that he claimed was hurting American workers. James, a former Bank of England economist appointed by Trump’s predecessor, had led the charge to raise interest rates to combat rising prices. The move sent shockwaves through financial markets, with the pound falling sharply against the dollar as traders feared a loss of confidence in US economic governance.
The British government, along with the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan, filed an amicus brief urging the court to strike down the firing. “An independent central bank is the bedrock of economic stability,” the brief argued. “Politicising monetary policy is a dangerous path that risks the prosperity of working people everywhere.”
The ruling is a victory for those who see central bank independence as a buffer against short-term political pressures. But for many in the industrial heartlands of Britain, the news will feel distant. In places like Middlesbrough or Rochdale, where paycheques are squeezed by rising food and fuel costs, the fine details of Fed governance matter less than the price of a loaf of bread.
Still, the implications are real. The Fed’s independence has long kept inflation in check, protecting the value of wages. Without it, workers could see their savings eroded more quickly. “When the central bank is independent, it can make tough decisions to keep prices stable,” said John O’Brien, a former union economist. “When politicians interfere, you get boom and bust. That hurts the poorest hardest.”
The Trump administration argued that the president needed control over economic policy to deliver for voters. But the court disagreed, noting that the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 explicitly limited presidential removal powers. The majority opinion, written by Chief Justice John Roberts, cited the “critical importance of insulating monetary policy from transient political influence.”
For British workers, the case underscores a broader battle. The UK’s own central bank independence, granted in 1997, has come under renewed scrutiny from critics who say it prioritises inflation over jobs. But today’s ruling reinforces a global consensus: central bankers must be free to act, even when it hurts.
As the news broke, the pound steadied against the dollar, and US stock futures rose. But the long-term test is whether the principle holds. For now, the verdict is clear: the law, backed by British allies, has held firm against the bully pulpit. The real economy is watching.








