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Federal Reserve Governor Stephen Miran resigned as chair of the White House’s Council of Economic Advisers on Feb. 3-4, 2026, fulfilling a pledge he made to the Senate after his assignment at the Fed extended past Jan. 31.
Miran, appointed by President Donald Trump in September 2025 to fill the unexpired term of Adriana Kugler, had been on unpaid leave from the CEA while serving on the Fed; although his term technically expired Jan. 31, he may remain until a successor is confirmed.
The White House confirmed the resignation in a statement noting Miran’s prior service to the administration.
Miran has dissented at Federal Open Market Committee meetings, pressing for substantially larger interest-rate cuts than the committee majority.
The move comes as Trump has nominated former Fed governor Kevin Warsh to succeed Jerome Powell as Fed chair, a process complicated by a Justice Department probe into Powell’s statements about Fed building renovations and resulting Senate resistance, including a hold from Sen.
Thom Tillis and bipartisan concerns on the Senate Banking Committee.
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The Washington Times stories: PoliticsFederal Reserve Governor Stephen Miran resigns from White House's Council of Economic Advisers
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Miran’s resignation meets a pledge but keeps him on the Fed, while his authorship of a controversial paper on tariffs and using IEEPA fuels criticism. Observers see the move as both tactical for a possible permanent seat and a flashpoint for market and policy risk if those ideas advance.
















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