--- title: "Wash's Confirmation Hearing 'Playing Tai Chi': Diffusing Embarrassment with Humor, Appeasing Trump with Ambiguity — But How Long Can This Last?" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/283664776.md" description: "Bloomberg columnist Jonathan Levin points out that Wash used evasive language to sidestep questions about Trump's interference in the Federal Reserve's independence, instead turning the focus toward the Fed itself. Faced with disagreements, he deflected with humor; when it came to rate cuts, he navigated around them with jargon. Clearly aware that significant rate cuts would be absurd under current economic conditions, Wash simply chose not to say so. These remarks reveal his predicament: either comply with rate cuts or become Trump's next target" datetime: "2026-04-22T12:24:12.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/283664776.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/283664776.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/283664776.md) --- # Wash's Confirmation Hearing 'Playing Tai Chi': Diffusing Embarrassment with Humor, Appeasing Trump with Ambiguity — But How Long Can This Last? Federal Reserve Chair nominee Wash, during Tuesday's Senate confirmation hearing, used evasive language to sidestep core concerns about damage to the Federal Reserve's independence, further unsettling markets regarding the direction of U.S. monetary policy. Bloomberg columnist Jonathan Levin wrote that during the hearing, **Wash attributed the primary threat to independence to the Federal Reserve itself**. He stated: "The fact that elected officials comment on interest rates does not mean monetary policy independence is threatened." However, prior to this, Trump had already leveraged the Department of Justice to pressure Fed leadership and repeatedly demanded rate cuts on social media. **Wash's argument was widely seen as a deliberate downplaying of White House pressure.** Wash's evasive posture precisely reflects his structural dilemma: **once confirmed, he will face a bind where he must either cut rates or become Trump's next target for attack.** The evasive language used during the hearing may temporarily maintain relations with the White House, but this strategy is unsustainable, and market doubts about the Fed's independence are unlikely to dissipate in the short term. ## Humor Deflects Disagreements, Jargon Sidesteps Rate Cuts Jonathan Levin noted that the highlight of Wash's hearing was not what he said, but how skillfully he avoided making any substantive statements. It is widely believed that Wash constructed a "distorted framework of argument" — **instead of directly addressing concerns about Trump's interference in the Fed's independence, he turned the focus toward the Fed itself, claiming that the latter's "mission creep" and "dereliction of duty" damaged its own credibility.** This statement appeared quite strange to observers. Trump did not merely "express opinions"; he leveraged the Justice Department to threaten Fed leadership and publicly called on social media to lower interest rates to 1% or even lower. Facing this reality, Wash chose to bypass the core issue using professional terminology. When Democratic Senator Chris Van Hollen asked whether it was reasonable to sharply cut rates from 3.5% to 1% given robust economic growth and inflation above targets, Wash invoked concepts such as "the interaction between interest rate policy and asset purchase programs," "the impact of artificial intelligence," and "the long-term lag effects of monetary policy," ultimately refusing to answer directly by citing "I do not believe in forward guidance." The article notes that **Wash clearly knows the answer — significantly cutting rates under these economic conditions would be absurd, he just refuses to say it aloud.** A more dramatic moment occurred when Senator Elizabeth Warren asked if he had any disagreements with Trump on any issues. Wash quipped that his only difference was Trump's praise calling him "born to be a central bank governor" — he joked that if he were truly "born to be a central bank governor," he should be "older, with grayer hair, and smoking a cigar." The joke was more awkward than humorous. ## Bending Before Entering: Can Wash Stand Straight Again After Confirmation? The independence of the Federal Reserve has long been viewed as the ballast stabilizing the global financial system. Its core logic is that monetary policy must be based on economic data, not political pressure. Once a central bank becomes the government's "printing press," the risks of runaway inflation and a collapse of currency credibility rise sharply. However, Wash's entire hearing logic precisely undermines this ballast — **by attributing the independence issue to the Fed itself, he constructed a "rationalized" narrative framework for Trump's intervention.** A deeper contradiction lies in the fact that once confirmed, Wash will face an unsolvable dilemma: either yield to Trump's pressure and cut rates, or uphold independent judgment and become the next target of attack. The article offers a vivid metaphor: **what Wash is doing now is like someone bending and bowing desperately before entering a door, only to have to stand straight again after entering — but the question remains: after all that bending, does he still have the strength to stand straight?** The article concludes that we can only "hope that once safely confirmed, he finds the passion for intellectual clarity and the courage to push back against the president." ## Related News & Research - [SpaceX, data centres in space, and commercial viability](https://longbridge.com/en/news/283656237.md) - [PREVIEW-Software makers' best may not be good enough as AI fears mount](https://longbridge.com/en/news/283638625.md) - [Trump says he will 'remember' companies that don't seek tariff refunds](https://longbridge.com/en/news/283566178.md) - [Rocket Lab Corporation $RKLB Holdings Raised by Zurcher Kantonalbank Zurich Cantonalbank](https://longbridge.com/en/news/283664300.md) - [16,108 Shares in Oracle Corporation $ORCL Bought by Leelyn Smith LLC](https://longbridge.com/en/news/283645101.md)