Level 1 — Absolute Beginner
The Federal Reserve is the central bank of the United States. It sets the price of borrowing money. This price is called the interest rate.
The boss of the Federal Reserve is the chair. The chair now is Jerome Powell. His time is ending soon.
President Trump wants a new chair. He picked a man called Kevin Warsh. Warsh was on the Federal Reserve before, many years ago.
On Monday, the Senate began a vote. If most senators say yes, Warsh will be the new chair. He starts work after May 15.
- central bank
- The main bank of a country that controls money and interest rates.
- interest rate
- The price someone pays to borrow money.
- chair
- Here, the leader or head of a committee or organisation.
- Senate
- One of the two parts of the U.S. Congress, with 100 senators.
- vote
- A way for people to choose between options by raising hands or pressing buttons.
- president
- The elected leader of a country like the United States.
- pick
- To choose someone or something.
- term
- The fixed length of time someone holds a job in government.
Level 2 — Elementary
The U.S. Federal Reserve is the most important central bank in the world. It decides how expensive it is to borrow money in the United States, which then affects loans, savings and the value of the dollar all around the world.
Every four years a chair is chosen to lead it. The current chair, Jerome Powell, has held the job since 2018. His term ends on May 15, 2026. Powell has said he plans to stay on the Fed's board for some time as a regular governor, even after he is no longer chair.
In January, President Donald Trump nominated Kevin Warsh to take over. Warsh is 56 years old, was a Federal Reserve governor from 2006 to 2011, and worked closely with Ben Bernanke during the 2008 financial crisis. Today he is a fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University.
On Monday, May 11, the full Senate began the final confirmation steps with a cloture vote. The Senate Banking Committee had already voted 13-11 to send the nomination forward, with every Republican in favour and every Democrat against. Republicans hold 53 seats in the chamber and need only a simple majority, so Warsh is widely expected to be confirmed before Powell's term ends.
- loan
- Money that someone borrows and promises to pay back, usually with interest.
- savings
- Money that a person keeps in a bank instead of spending it.
- nominate
- To officially propose someone for a job or position.
- governor (Fed)
- A member of the Federal Reserve's seven-person Board, appointed by the president.
- financial crisis
- A period when banks, markets and the economy come under severe stress.
- fellow (Hoover)
- A senior scholar attached to a think tank, here at Stanford University.
- cloture
- A Senate procedure that ends debate so the chamber can move to a final vote.
- simple majority
- More than half of the votes cast — 51 out of 100 in the U.S. Senate.
Level 3 — Intermediate
The U.S. Senate convened on Monday, May 11, 2026, to take up the nomination of Kevin Maxwell Warsh to succeed Jerome Powell as the sixteenth chair of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. The vehicle on the floor was a cloture motion — a procedural step to close debate — that, if passed, will trigger a final up-or-down confirmation vote later in the week, almost certainly before Powell's term as chair expires on Friday, May 15.
Warsh, 56, is a former Federal Reserve governor who served from 2006 to 2011 and is widely remembered for his closeness to then-chair Ben Bernanke during the 2008 financial crisis and for his subsequent vocal scepticism of quantitative easing. Since leaving the Fed he has worked as a fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, written extensively on monetary policy and central-bank governance, and remained a fixture in Republican monetary-policy circles. President Trump nominated him on January 30, 2026.
The Senate Banking Committee advanced the nomination on April 29 on a 13-11 strict party-line vote — the first fully partisan vote on a Federal Reserve chair nominee in the committee's history. Democrats led by Elizabeth Warren and Sherrod Brown have argued that Warsh is too politically aligned with the White House and too sceptical of large-scale asset purchases for an institution whose credibility rests on its independence; Republicans counter that he is exceptionally well qualified and that his hawkish instincts on inflation and asset prices are exactly what the moment requires.
Powell, who is not stepping off the seven-member Board itself when he leaves the chairmanship, is expected to remain a sitting governor 'for a period of time to be determined.' That is unusual — most outgoing chairs depart entirely — but it leaves the new chair with the votes to maintain continuity if needed. Markets have largely priced in Warsh's confirmation; attention now turns to the June 16-17 FOMC meeting, which would be the first under his gavel and the first practical test of how aggressively he intends to bend the policy curve.
- Board of Governors
- The seven-member governing body of the Federal Reserve System in Washington, D.C.
- quantitative easing
- A central-bank tool of buying large quantities of bonds and other assets to push down long-term interest rates.
- monetary policy
- Decisions about interest rates and money supply made by a central bank to influence the economy.
- party-line vote
- A vote in which every member of one party votes one way and every member of the other party votes the opposite way.
- hawkish
- Favouring tighter monetary policy and higher interest rates to fight inflation.
- asset purchases
- A central bank's buying of bonds or other financial assets to add money to the economy.
- FOMC
Level 4 — Advanced
The United States Senate convened on Monday, May 11, 2026, to take up the cloture motion on Kevin Maxwell Warsh's nomination to chair the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the procedural prelude to a final up-or-down vote that Senate leadership has explicitly indicated will be held before Jerome H. Powell's four-year term as chair expires this Friday. Should the chamber, as expected, invoke cloture along the party lines that prevailed in committee, Warsh would be confirmed under Senate rules now operative for executive-branch nominations on a simple majority — a threshold the 53-seat Republican conference can clear without recourse to any of the procedural rear-guard actions Senate Democrats have telegraphed.
Warsh, a 56-year-old Yale-educated lawyer who served as Federal Reserve governor under George W. Bush from 2006 to 2011, is in many respects an unusual modern Fed chair candidate. He arrived at the Board having spent the prior four years as a Morgan Stanley investment banker rather than as an academic economist; his tenure is most closely associated with the firefighting phase of the Global Financial Crisis under Ben Bernanke; and his post-Fed career, situated principally at the Hoover Institution, has produced an unusually full public record of monetary-policy commentary, including pointed criticism of asset purchases by both the Bernanke and Powell Feds, of the 'flexible average inflation targeting' framework adopted in 2020, and of what he has described as the central bank's drift toward distributional and climate policy mandates outside its statutory remit.
Critics, led most visibly by Senators Elizabeth Warren and Sherrod Brown, contend that the constellation of Warsh's public statements, his Trump-aligned policy network, his openly stated willingness to consider deep structural reform of the Federal Reserve, and his sceptical reading of the conventional dual-mandate balance threaten to erode the political independence that has historically underwritten the dollar's reserve status and the Fed's ability to act counter-cyclically. Defenders — including a near-unanimous Republican conference, several large-bank chief executives quoted in trade press over the weekend, and a sequence of Wall Street Journal editorials — counter that Warsh's hawkish instincts on inflation, his investment-banker fluency with market microstructure, and his openness to a transparent, rules-based framework are precisely the corrective the post-pandemic Fed requires.
Powell himself has signalled an unusual transition arrangement: rather than departing the Board, he intends to remain a sitting governor 'for a period of time to be determined,' a course last taken by Marriner Eccles in 1948. The arrangement preserves the new chair's nominal control of the Federal Open Market Committee while plausibly providing an institutional counterweight on policy votes. Market positioning into the May 11 cloture motion has been measured: the dollar index has firmed only modestly, two-year Treasury yields edged up two basis points, and Fed funds futures continue to imply a high probability that the June 16-17 FOMC meeting — Warsh's likely first — will hold rates steady, with the substantive debate over the speed of any subsequent cutting cycle now pushed into the second half of 2026.