This week, Bill Pulte, head of the Trump administration’s Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), made headlines — and shook markets — when he alleged that Federal Reserve Gov. Lisa Cook claimed two primary residences on a mortgage application and called for her resignation and investigation by the Department of Justice.
“I am gathering the accurate information to answer any legitimate questions and provide the facts,” Cook said in response, but added that she had “no intention of being bullied to step down from my position because of some questions raised in a tweet.”
Trump and Pulte’s actions aren’t just bizarre distractions. The harm here is real.
The director of the FHFA — tasked with overseeing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and keeping the housing finance market stable — should be focused on making mortgages accessible and affordable for American families. Instead, Pulte has spent his tenure lashing out at Fed Chair Jerome Powell, and weaponizing the agency he runs against the president’s political opponents in what The Wall Street Journal editorial board calls “an ominous turn in political lawfare” and “an ugly way for government regulators to behave.”
For months, President Donald Trump and Pulte have pressured the Fed to slash interest rates, hoping to juice an economy weakened by the president’s own mismanagement. While Powell signaled this week that the dramatic slowdown in hiring over the past few months “may warrant” reducing rates, rising inflation caused by the administration’s own chaotic tariff policy continues to be a “challenging situation.”
When other economic officials — from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to the Federal Trade Commission and the National Labor Relations Board — refused to bend to political pressure, Trump simply fired them. But a recent decision from the Supreme Court’s conservative majority suggested that members of the Fed’s board have greater protections from firings than officials from those other agencies. Instead, Trump has tried to scare Powell and Cook into resignation with the threat of criminal prosecution.








