In a landmark ruling that rattled the White House, the Supreme Court dealt Donald Trump a stinging defeat on his attempts to wrest control of the Federal Reserve. The decision, handed down this morning, reaffirms the central bank’s operational independence, a cornerstone of modern economic governance that Britain has long championed. For decades, the Bank of England’s freedom from political interference has been the bedrock of our monetary credibility. The American verdict sends a clear signal: the integrity of independent institutions trumps transient political ambition.
The case centred on Trump’s executive order demanding the Fed submit its interest rate decisions for White House review. The Justices, in a 6-3 ruling, struck it down, arguing it violated the Federal Reserve Act’s express purpose of shielding monetary policy from electoral cycles. The dissenters, predictably, painted the majority as elitists obstructing democratic accountability. But this is dangerous nonsense. Handing the keys to monetary policy to a president with an eye on the polls is a recipe for inflationary chaos. We have seen that movie before, in the 1970s, and it ended with double-digit inflation and a brutal recession.
The markets, naturally, breathed a collective sigh of relief. Sterling gained nearly a cent against the dollar within hours, while gilt yields edged lower. Investors loathe uncertainty, and nothing spooks capital flows more than the prospect of politicised central banking. The yield on the 10-year Treasury, which had been creeping up on fears of Fed subservience, retreated sharply. This is the bottom line: independent central banks anchor inflation expectations. Without them, the pound would be trading at parity with the dollar, and homeowners would be facing mortgage rates closer to 10% than 5%.
Britain should take note. Our own Bank of England has faced its share of political pressure in recent years, from the Truss administration’s disastrous mini-budget to murmurings of a review into its mandate. The government must resist such siren calls. The Supreme Court’s ruling is a timely reminder that the separation of monetary policy from fiscal largesse is not an antiquated nicety but a practical necessity. If ministers want to sustain low inflation and attract foreign capital, they must defend the Bank’s independence with the same vigour as their American counterparts defended the Fed.
Of course, the dissenters have a point about accountability. The Fed and the Bank of England operate with enormous power, yet their leaders are appointed, not elected. That is why transparency matters. But the solution is better communication, not political subjugation. The Bank already faces rigorous scrutiny from the Treasury Select Committee. It publishes detailed minutes and forecasts. What more could one want? To hand control to a chancellor or a president would be to court disaster.
The irony is that Trump, who built his brand on deal-making and winning, now finds himself on the losing end of a constitutional showdown. But this is not about personalities. It is about the architecture of our economic system. The Supreme Court has done the global economy a service. Britain must now ensure it does not squander that legacy. As the old City saying goes: "Never fight the Fed, and never let the government buy the Bank."








