Trump's 'Firing' of Lisa Cook Is Headed for SCOTUS
Plus: Pam Bondi flunks free speech 101.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit issued an important decision this week in favor of Lisa Cook, the embattled member of the Federal Reserve's Board of Governors whom President Donald Trump is currently seeking to fire. The ruling lets Cook remain in her job for now while also practically guaranteeing that the U.S. Supreme Court will soon take up the case.
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By a 2–1 vote on Monday, the D.C. Circuit blocked Trump's purported firing of Cook from going into effect while her lawsuit plays out. Why? Because, the D.C. Circuit said, Cook "is likely to succeed" in showing "that she did not receive sufficient process prior to her removal in violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment."
According to the Federal Reserve Act, the president may remove a member of the Federal Reserve's Board of Governors "for cause." In this case, Trump alleges that "there is sufficient cause to remove" Cook from her position as a Fed governor because there is "sufficient reason to believe [Cook] may have made false statements on one or more mortgage agreements." At this point, however, Trump's allegations against Cook are just that, allegations. No formal charges have been filed against Cook, and she has not been convicted of any wrongdoing.
The D.C. Circuit took no position this week on whether Trump's allegations against Cook are enough to satisfy the "for cause" requirement. Instead, the court only addressed her due process claim. That procedural win was enough to keep Cook in her job for the time being.
But the sole dissenter in the case, Judge Gregory Katsas, did address Trump's allegations against Cook, arguing that they are in fact sufficient to justify her firing. According to Katsas, "for cause" is a "broad" phrase that places significant discretion in the hands of the president. Trump "plainly invoked a cause relating to Cook's conduct, ability, fitness, or competence," Katsas argued, and that invocation alone is enough, in his view, to render her removal lawful.
Katsas' dissent effectively tees up the big questions that SCOTUS will have to answer when it hears the case. Namely, is an allegation of wrongdoing sufficient to satisfy the "for cause" requirement needed to remove a Fed official like Cook? Or does "for cause" mandate something more concrete than a mere allegation, such as a formal charge or a conviction? The Supreme Court will also need to consider whether the allegations against Cook are merely a pretext given by Trump to justify the otherwise illegal firing. In other words, do the courts have to accept the president's stated rationale at face value?
The Trump administration has already announced that it will be appealing this loss, so the Supreme Court may be expected to join the fray relatively soon. Stay tuned.
In Other Legal News: Pam Bondi Flunks Free Speech 101
Attorney General Pam Bondi is under the mistaken impression that the federal government may punish "hate speech" without violating the First Amendment. I realize that other politicians and pundits have espoused this same erroneous view in recent years, but there is something especially noxious when it is the attorney general of the United States doing the espousing.
Because Bondi is apparently in need of a crash course on free speech, I would urge her to spend some quality time reading the Supreme Court's 2017 decision in Matal v. Tam, in which the Court reiterated its long-held view that "the proudest boast of our free speech jurisprudence is that we protect the freedom to express 'the thought that we hate.'"
Wouldn't it be nice if constitutional literacy were a job requirement for those holding important positions in the federal government?
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Did congress give Trump permission to even take it to scotus?
Dear Congress,
In the future, please provide clear boundaries for what “for cause” actually means.
Can't. That assumes the Rule of Law means dispassionate objective neutral arbiters of justice interpreting laws. But Men interpret laws, and Men have their own desires. Thus sayeth public choice theory, common sense, and history going back as far as you can see.
What if we ask pretty please?
I'd think at a minimum the "cause" should be "true."
"For cause" implies at the minimum that some event or transgression occurred.
'Due Process' for what? Where is Cooks 'right' granted to her job?
Once upon a time 'due process' was a process of criminal charges.
Now apparently it's a 'right-to an others-granted job process'.
Where's my 'due process' to live in the white house?!!! /s
Holy crap the legal system is getting full-on leftarded.
Due process is "due" whenever a governmental body--or entity acting with the authority of or in the capacity of a governmental body--takes action that affects an individual's constitutional or statutory rights. It applies to criminal charges, but it's also much broader than that. (My summary is probably imperfect--I'm a little rusty). If a member of the Fed's Board of Governors can only be terminated "for cause," then there's a strong argument that her termination--by the unilateral determination of the president, with no clear recourse--was a due process violation. I'm not sure exactly what kind of process is "due" in this situation, but probably something more than she got.
I predicted back in January that Trump and his fans would soon find out that they have few friends in the federal judiciary. Liberal judges will rule against him because they don't like his policies. Conservative judges will rule against him because most of them are actually pretty committed to, you know, *law* --and Trump has made it abundantly clear that he is not. I further predicted that the MAGAsphere would scream about "liberal activist judges" any time a judge ruled against the Administration. They would find that there are very, very, few "conservative" judges in the federal judiciary, because, in their view, a "conservative" judge is one who backs Donald Trump, and any judge who doesn't is a "liberal activist." Law be damned.
"I predicted back in January that Trump and his fans would soon find out that they have few friends in the federal judiciary."
Lol, as if this wasn't expected.
Oh, there are plenty of federal judges with a reputation for being "conservative." About a quarter of current federal District Court and Circuit Court judges are appointees from Trump's first term. Some MAGA folks may have entered 2025 already disillusioned with the federal judiciary, but we still see shock and outrage whenever "conservative" judges rule in a way that demonstrates fidelity to the law rather than to Donald Trump. Traitors!
The problem with your claim is the implication she has a right to that office. I don’t see that working. Separation of Powers means that she is an Executive Branch Officer, ultimately reporting to the President. He cannot adequately execute the duties as Executive if he can’t control the Officers reporting to him.
Which is to say, my prediction is that the Supreme Court will hold that she has no Due Process rights to her position as an Officer in the Executive Branch. The attempt by Congress to insulate her position from this will fall as an attempt by Congress to infringe the President’s Article II Executive power. The majority seems to have been moving this way, as the Administration challenges the independence of the Fourth branch of government.
She clearly committed mortgage fraud, though it was relatively minor. I would say a ranking Fed employee should be absolutely clean relative to financial transactions. So "for cause" fits.
Also Bondi is a moron, who should be replaced.
I'm amazed that so few readers or writers of this publication can analyze a topic without regard to whether or not it's good for Trump.
Bondi is the AG because Trump saw a hot chick on TV saying nice things about him. Her take on hate speech is absurd. At the same time, the idea that nobody in government can be fired without being formally arrested or filmed sodomizing a corpse is even more absurd.
Note to Damon: It is the nation's district court judges who need to familiarize themselves with the constitution. They are constantly being overturned and chastised by 6 to 9 members of the SC, but they get to keep their jobs. That, too, is absurd.
Lisa Cook's bank documents appear to contradict Trump administration's mortgage fraud allegations
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/trump-administration/lisa-cook-federal-reserve-bank-documents-mortgage-fraud-allegations-rcna230964
A loan summary from the Bank-Fund Staff Federal Credit Union in May 2021 reads: “Property Use: Vacation Home.” Additionally, public records in Fulton County, Georgia, reviewed by NBC News show that no tax exemptions available for a primary residence were sought by Cook.
The President holds all the executive power. He can fire anyone he wishes in the Executive branch precisely because the employees and officials execute the President's power. The real question is, is there really such a thing as an *independent* agency, like the Fed?
That is a position unsupported and in conflict with thr Constitution.
Article II § 1. The President has the Executive power.
Certain positions in the executive are specifically carved out to prevent this. This is a feature, not a bug. You just need people with reading comprehension and a little backbone to stand up to a tyrannical president when he/she shows up.
Is it a feature, though? A Federal Reserve Governor is appointed for a term of 14 years. That's 10 years longer than a Presidential term and 8 years longer than the term of the Senators who approved such appointments. There's a serious dead-hand problem here. Moreover, do we really want to privilege the interests of unelected, accountable bureaucrats over the interests of elected officials (the President, Senators) who are at least theoretically accountable to the People?
All federal judges have life appointments. That is far worse.
That's an argument for declaring the Fed unconstitutional.
Not an argument for allowing Trump to fire governors on a whim.
Carved out by Congress to encroach on the President’s Article II powers.
With all the power that the federal reserve has we should expect much more and Lisa Cook clearly is suspect.
She may not have been convicted, but it looks convincing enough that she should be removed because we should expect more and hold them to a higher level.
Unfortunately we hold government officials and unelected bureaucrats to a lower standard.
Caesar's wife turned on its head. Same as Absolute and Qualified Immunity. I was gobsmacked when I found the Supreme Court has actually ruled that as long as a prosecutor's malfeasance was done as part of his job, he is immune to prosecution. This malfeasance has included telling witnesses to destroy evidence and lie on the stand, and telling jail house snitches to lie or face worse charges. Yet because it was done in the course of their official duties, all was forgiven.
Same with judges. They can threaten witnesses and defendants and mere spectators, find them in contempt and throw them in jail without any kind of hearing or trial or counsel, in violation of the Sixth Amendment at least, and the Supremes have said OK By Us since he was doing it in the course of his job.
Ritual over justice, every time.
We just had an article the other day explaining that government hacks can't be fired for celebrating an assassination. And Cook is apparently entitled to some unspecified due process because she's somehow entitled to her phoney baloney job. I guess our selfless public servants are really super special. And Reason is totally cool with that.
There's another aspect to this firing delay which do not really grok because IANAL. Lawyers have their own jargon, and one of the terms they twist is "irreparable harm". It means incarceration. You can be fined millions of dollars, and that is not irreparable harm because if you win, you get it back, ha ha. But it's supposed to mean, in legal circles, that being fired is not subject to temporary injunctions or restraining orders to preserve the status quo until the trial can sort it out; if you win, you get your back pay, so no irreparable harm.
So preventing Cook from being fired flies in the face of this. Different rules for different people. The Rule of Law for my side but not thy side.
I find it comforting that, once put in place, no federal spending can be stopped and no federal functionary can be removed. (Bondi is probably banking on the latter being absolute.)
Congress can reverse what it approves.
We learned in 2020 that you can't be removed from office until after you are convicted in court.
She got due process, just not the process you commies are now demanding. Her actions were reviewed and deemed a breach of her responsibilities and wending their way through the legal process. So now we're just left with Damon defending fraud and fraudsters because they're Marxists. You cunts don't give a shit about anything but power and right now wailing "due process" is a means to retain such.
You aren't guilty in the eyes of the law until the gavel hits the block. Everything else is speculation until then.
This is very much not how due process works in the context of the administrative state.
No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.
Keeping your government isn't listed. No more rubber rooms.
Another problem the MAGAs have is the actual documents show she did nothing wrong. Trump lied.
Due process is leftist.
Facts, logic, and adherence to the Constitution is leftist.
See above. Article II § 1.