Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trump: Fed is a drag on economy

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said Tuesday the economy would “go up like a rocket” with better policies from the Federal Reserve while the close political ally he hopes to put on its board faced more questions about his candidacy from female GOP senators based on his past writing about women.

In a tweet, the president said that the economy, while doing well, would do even better if the Fed started cutting rates and provided “some quantitati­ve easing,” referring to the process the Fed used after the financial crisis to purchase bonds to lower long-term interest rates.

Trump contrasted the Fed’s current moves with China, which he said was adding “great stimulus” to its economy. The president has been critical of Fed Chairman Jerome Powell and the Fed’s credit tightening, including a string of four rate hikes last year.

To counter what Trump saw as wrong-headed policies, the president said he would nominate two close political allies to the Fed’s seven-member board.

Former 2012 GOP presidenti­al candidate Herman Cain has withdrawn from considerat­ion. But Trump’s other choice, conservati­ve commentato­r Stephen Moore, has gone on a talk-show blitz to try to save his candidacy after disclosure­s

of incendiary comments he has made in the past about women.

Moore has said the comments were inappropri­ate efforts to make jokes, but more female GOP senators expressed their concerns on Tuesday.

Asked about Moore’s prospects, Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., noted that the White House has not yet nominated Moore. If he is nominated, Mcconnell said, “We’ll cross that bridge when we come to it.”

Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W. Va., said that “it’s hard to look past” Moore’s previous statements, while Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-tenn., said his comments were “not good” and would be an area she would want to question him about.

Sen. Susan Collins, R-maine, said she also had concerns, and Sen.

Joni Ernst, R-iowa, said if the White House does nominate Moore, it would be unlikely that she could support him. “Look at his writings. I’m not enthused,” she told reporters Monday. “I’m a woman, right here folks.”

In his tweet on Tuesday, Trump said, “Our Federal Reserve has incessantl­y lifted interest rates, even though inflation is very low,

and instituted a very big dose of quantitati­ve tightening.” Trump was referring to the Fed’s rate hikes and moves to trim its stockpile of bonds purchased after the financial crisis to lower long-term interest rates.

“Yes, we are doing very well at

3.2 percent GDP (economic growth in the first quarter), but with our wonderfull­y low inflation, we could be setting major records,” Trump said in his tweet.

Trump’s latest attack on the Fed came as the central bank began a two-day meeting in which officials are expected to keep rates unchanged after projecting in March that they did not expect to raise rates at all this year following four rate hikes in 2018.

Moore has gone on television interview programs to answer attacks about his past writings, and White House officials have come to his defense.

Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway told reporters Tuesday that the president is still backing Moore for one of two vacancies on the Fed board and said she was not concerned about his past comments.

“I’m a strong successful woman who’s worked with Stephen Moore for decades. I know how he feels about women, how he treats women in the workplace.”

Moore on Sunday apologized for comments in the past viewed as

demeaning to women, saying some were misguided jokes.

In a CNBC interview Tuesday, Moore said the president and the White House economics team are “totally behind me.”

In a column for the Washington Times in 2000, Moore wrote that colleges were places for men to lose their boyhood innocence and “stay out way too late drinking.”

Moore wrote, “And the women seemed to survive just fine. If they were so oppressed and offended by drunken, lustful frat boys, why is it that on Friday nights they showed up in droves in tight skirts to the keg parties.”

Moore has been a conservati­ve commentato­r for more than two decades and was an adviser on Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign, helping to draft the campaign’s tax cut program.

Even before his writings on women surfaced, Moore was being attacked by Democrats for being too partisan to serve on the Fed’s seven-member board, which seeks to conduct interest-rate policies without regard to outside political pressure.

If Moore is nominated for the Fed post, he is expected to need to hold most of the GOP support because Democrats are likely to oppose the nomination. Republican­s control the Senate 53-47.

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