Now that Donald Trump has publicly confirmed that he’s eyeing Herman Cain for a position on the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors, the Georgia Republican is starting to reflect on his upcoming confirmation hearings. Cain apparently wants the job for which he has no meaningful qualifications, but he isn’t sure he’ll get it.
“It’s an honor to be considered, whether or not I will make it through this process — time will tell,” Cain said. “Would I be disappointed if I don’t make it through this process? No.”
He’d have lots of company.
When Trump chose Republican pundit Stephen Moore to serve on the Federal Reserve board, the president had obviously made a uniquely ridiculous choice. For a variety of reasons, Cain might actually be worse.
Among the most glaring problems with the failed presidential candidate joining the Fed board is that Cain doesn’t appear to understand economic policy at the most basic level. A Washington Post analysis described his views on monetary policy and financial regulation as “quack-tastic.”
The New York Times added that there’s an underappreciated threat to these political tactics:
All presidential appointees to the Fed’s board of governors come with their own political point of view, which generally dovetails with the president who appointed them. But typically they have also brought deep technical expertise and an inclination to keep political dimensions out of Fed debates.
“People around the table did have political views, and I did, too,” said Alan Blinder, who was appointed vice chairman of the Fed by President Bill Clinton and is more recently the author of “Advice and Dissent,” about the role of politicians versus technocrats in shaping policy. “But you weren’t supposed to bring them into the room when it was time to make a decision, and people didn’t.”
That is the tradition that Mr. Trump’s approach endangers.
That’s true, of course, but let’s not forget that it’s an approach Trump seems to have stumbled onto quite recently.
I looked up the existing members of the Fed board the other day and was reminded that Moore and Cain won’t be this president’s first choices. On the contrary, in his first two years in office, Trump nominated three other Fed governors: none was especially controversial, and each of the three were confirmed with at least some bipartisan support.









