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US scraps deployment of 4,000 troops to Poland
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Zverev pulls out of home event in Hamburg with back injury
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Xi, Trump eke small wins from talks but no major deals: analysts
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De Ligt to miss World Cup after back surgery
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England's Rice braces for 'hate and love' at World Cup
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Milan Fashion Week says will ask brands not to show fur
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Carrick says Man Utd future to be decided 'pretty soon'
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'Out of shape' Lukaku named in Belgium World Cup squad
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X pledges crackdown on illegal content in UK
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Israel strikes Lebanon as talks in US enter second day
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Kyiv in mourning after 24 killed as Ukraine, Russia swap POWs
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Beckham becomes first British billionaire sportsman
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Aussie star, Danish clubbing ode through to Eurovision final
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German Oscar winner Huller feels war guilt 'every day'
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Thai lawmakers vote to revive clean air bill
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Bayern warn that Canada's Davies struggling to be fit for World Cup
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Long-serving Coleman to end Everton career at end of season
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Trump to tour Fed, ramping up war on central bank
Donald Trump is due to visit the US Federal Reserve Thursday as the president escalates pressure on its chairman Jerome Powell over the central bank's management of the economy.
Trump -- who wants to oust Powell for refusing to lower interest rates but likely lacks the legal authority -- has threatened to fire the Fed chief over cost overruns for a renovation of its Washington headquarters.
The White House did not specify whether Trump would meet Powell, who has vowed to remain in place until the end of his term next May, but the president would likely welcome any encounter.
The afternoon tour comes with Trump desperate to shift focus from the crisis engulfing his administration over its decision to close the file on multi-millionaire sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, who died in 2019 while awaiting trial on trafficking charges.
Attorney General Pam Bondi informed the president in the spring that his name appeared in the Epstein files, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Trump has picked all manner of targets, including his Democratic predecessors and former chiefs of the security and intelligence services, as he bids to move Epstein out of the headlines.
He again berated Powell on Wednesday, moments after Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent had appeared on television to claim the banker's job was safe.
"Housing in our Country is lagging because Jerome 'Too Late' Powell refuses to lower Interest Rates," Trump thundered on his social media platform, Truth Social.
Presidential visits to the Federal Reserve are not unheard of -- Franklin D. Roosevelt, Gerald Ford and George W. Bush all made the trip -- but they are rare.
Trump has criticized Powell for months over his insistence on keeping short-term interest rate at 4.3 percent this year, after cutting it three times last year, when Joe Biden was in office.
Powell says he is monitoring the response of the economy to Trump's dizzying array of import tariffs, which he has warned could lead to a hike in inflation.
But Trump has angrily accused Powell of holding back the economy, calling the man he nominated in his first term "stupid" and a "loser."
- Threats and abuse -
Soaring costs for the Fed's facelift of its 88-year-old Washington headquarters and a neighboring building -- from an initial $1.9 billion to $2.5 billion -- have caught Trump's eye.
Ahead of his visit, staff gave reporters a tour of the renovations, on track to finish in 2027.
A significant driver of the cost is security, including blast resistant windows and measures to prevent the building from collapsing in the event of an explosion.
Plans for a rooftop seating area were abandoned, the staff said, as they were seen as an unnecessary "amenity."
Trump's budget director Russell Vought wrote to Powell earlier this month to tell him the president was "extremely troubled by your mismanagement of the Federal Reserve System."
"Instead of attempting to right the Fed's fiscal ship, you have plowed ahead with an ostentatious overhaul of your Washington, D.C. headquarters," Vought wrote.
The Federal Reserve, the world's most important central bank, makes independent monetary policy decisions and its board members typically serve under both Republican and Democratic presidents.
Experts question whether Trump has the authority to fire Powell, especially since a Supreme Court opinion in May that allowed the president to remove other independent agency members but suggested that this did not apply to the Fed.
Before the visit, Trump plans to sign executive orders at the White House on Thursday afternoon, as he continues to face pushback from his supporters over his handling of the Epstein case.
Justice Department officials were to interview Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein's imprisoned accomplice on Thursday in her cell in Tallahassee, Florida, US media reported.
O.Bulka--BTB