The Supreme Court handed the Federal Reserve a narrow but meaningful victory on June 29, 2026, ruling 5-4 that President Donald Trump cannot immediately remove Fed Governor Lisa Cook from her position. The ruling blocked what would have been an unprecedented executive intrusion into the central bank’s leadership.
Chief Justice John Roberts wrote for the majority, leaning heavily on the Federal Reserve Act’s “for cause” standard for removing board members. In plain terms: the president cannot fire a Fed governor simply because he wants to. There has to be a legitimate, substantiated reason, and it has to survive legal scrutiny.
The case traces back to August 2025, when Trump announced via social media that he was removing Cook, citing allegations of mortgage fraud from before her time at the Fed. Cook and her supporters called the accusations flimsy, and the courts agreed, at least provisionally. The Supreme Court’s ruling keeps her in place while litigation continues.
Roberts drew a careful line in the opinion, distinguishing the Fed’s legally protected independence from other executive agencies where Trump has successfully expanded presidential removal powers.
Cook’s position carries particular historical weight. She is the first African American woman to serve on the Federal Reserve Board, appointed by President Biden in 2023 with a term running through 2038.












