Trump Demands Powell’s Resignation Over $2.5 Billion Palace Scandal

Trump Demands Powell’s Resignation Over $2.5 Billion Palace Scandal

President Trump has urged Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell to resign immediately or risk being removed for allegedly lying to Congress. The reason behind this call? A $2.5 billion renovation of the Fed’s headquarters, designed to resemble a modern-day Versailles, which was kept hidden from the public, funded by taxpayers, and denied under oath by Powell. Trump’s revelations point to a deeper issue—systemic corruption within the financial establishment. While everyday Americans faced challenges like inflation and job losses, Powell’s Fed was secretly constructing a lavish fortress. Leaked plans reveal features such as rooftop gardens, private elevators, and marble-lined dining areas for executives. The public was led to believe this was just a “necessary update,” but Powell denied the extravagance while documents from his own organization now tell a different story. This isn’t just a renovation; it feels like a betrayal.

Bill Pulte, the head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, broke the silence. He stepped up as a whistleblower, exposing a major cover-up with solid evidence that contradicts Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell’s sworn testimony. Now, the entire institution is under scrutiny, revealing not just its physical structure but also the deceitful culture that supports it. This scandal goes beyond Powell; it shows the Federal Reserve’s true colors as a government-like cartel. Lying to Congress isn’t just a mistake; it’s a serious federal crime. If an average citizen lied to a Senate committee, they’d face jail time. But Powell seems to escape unscathed, living in luxury while others would be punished. This glaring double standard is what former President Trump has just taken aim at.

The Federal Reserve has never really been a public entity; it operates as a private organization led by unelected individuals who lack accountability to the people. Powell’s exposure marks the beginning of a long-overdue reckoning. Trump’s message is straightforward: resign, face criminal charges, or get removed. This isn’t just for show; it’s a firm stance. The era of bankers getting away with everything is coming to an end. The economy won’t be ruled by global financiers anymore. The President is holding the Federal Reserve accountable—not out of spite, but to seek justice. For every worker burdened by inflation, every small business ruined by rising interest rates, and every citizen misled—justice is on the way.

The Fed’s $2.5 Billion Taj Mahal: A Case Study in Why We Must Abolish the Federal Reserve

We’re talking rooftop gardens, private dining rooms, governors’ elevators, and even Italian beehives. Italian beehives! While ordinary people are scraping by under crushing inflation and sky-high interest rates, the Fed’s building itself a palace on the National Mall, and they’re doing it in near secrecy. This isn’t just a renovation; it’s a monument to arrogance and a screaming case for why they must abolish the Federal Reserve once and for all. G. Edward Griffin, author of The Creature from Jekyll Island: A Second Look at the Federal Reserve, lists seven solid reasons to abolish the Federal Reserve.

The $2.5 Billion Boondoggle: A Breakdown

Let’s start with the numbers. In 2019, the Fed pegged the cost of renovating its Marriner S. Eccles and FRB-East buildings at $1.9 billion. By 2025, that figure has skyrocketed to $2.5 billion—a 30% jump. Inflation, they say. Rising steel and cement costs, they claim. But let’s cut through the fog: $2.5 billion for two buildings that house 2,500 employees works out to $1 million per employee. Compare that to the Department of Homeland Security’s $250 million renovation of 450,000 square feet for the same number of staff at the Ronald Reagan Building just down the road. The Fed’s project is ten times more expensive. For what? A “critical backlog of upgrades”? Or a gilded headquarters for an institution that’s been fleecing the American people for decades? The Eccles Building, built in 1937 for $3.4 million (about $77 million in 2025 dollars), has served the Fed for nearly 90 years. Suddenly, it’s not good enough? The Fed claims outdated systems, modern building codes, and security needs justify the cost. But planning documents from 2021, reviewed by the Senate Banking Committee, tell a different story: private dining rooms, rooftop terraces for “urban wildlife and pollinators,” ornate water features, and those infamous Italian beehives. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell testified in June 2025 that there are “no VIP dining rooms, no special elevators, no water features, no beehives.” Yet the documents say otherwise. Either Powell’s misled Congress, or the Fed’s planning a bait-and-switch. Either way, the secrecy reeks of an institution that thinks it’s above accountability.

The Fed’s Financial Failure: Bleeding Red Ink

Here’s the kicker: the Fed isn’t even solvent right now. For decades, it raked in profits, sending billions to the U.S. Treasury—$97.7 billion in 2015 alone. But since 2022, it’s been hemorrhaging money: $114.6 billion in losses in 2023, $77.5 billion in 2024, and a cumulative $233 billion over three years. Why? Because Powell’s rate hikes to fight the inflation the Fed helped create have spiked the interest it pays on bank reserves, outpacing its bond earnings. The Fed’s securities portfolio is underwater to the tune of $220 billion since mid-2022, with projections of $1.5 trillion in losses over the coming years. Now, the Fed will tell you it’s not “taxpayer-funded” because it lives off its investments and bank fees. Don’t fall for it. When the Fed loses money, it stops sending profits to the Treasury, which means less revenue for public programs. That shortfall hits taxpayers indirectly. So, while in the US you’re paying 6% on your mortgage and $4 for a loaf of bread, the Fed’s burning $2.5 billion on a headquarters it can’t afford. If this isn’t a case for dismantling an institution that’s lost its way, I don’t know what is.

The Fed’s Arrogance: A Symptom of a Broken System

This $2.5 billion renovation isn’t just a bad budget decision: it’s a symptom of the Fed’s fundamental flaws. Since its creation in 1913, the Federal Reserve has operated as a quasi-private fiefdom, answerable to neither Congress nor the American people. It manipulates interest rates, prints money out of thin air, and fuels inflation that erodes your savings. Now, it’s building a $2.5 billion monument to itself while the economy groans under its policies. Senator Cynthia Lummis nailed it: “The Federal Reserve hasn’t earned a dime in years but somehow found $2.5 billion to build a modern-day Palace of Versailles. No accountability. Just arrogance.” Senator Tim Scott has called for Powell’s censure over misleading testimony, and this is taxpayer-funded excess at its worst.

Why Abolish the Fed? This $2.5 billion debacle is just the latest reason to abolish the Federal Reserve. Let’s be clear: the Fed isn’t a neutral referee; it’s a central planner that distorts markets, punishes savers, and rewards Wall Street. Its easy-money policies fueled the 2008 financial crisis and the post-COVID inflation surge. Its independence shields it from accountability, letting it spend billions on luxury headquarters while Main Street struggles. And its very existence undermines the free market principles. Abolishing the Fed would mean returning to sound money—perhaps a gold-backed currency or a ascended competition. It would force Congress to take responsibility for monetary policy, not unelected bankers. It would end the cycle of boom-and-bust economics driven by artificial interest rates. And it would stop unelected elites from building $2.5 billion palaces while the rest of us pay the price.

The Path Forward: End the Fed

This $2.5 billion travesty demands action. Abolish the Federal Reserve. It’s time to end this century-old experiment in central banking. Return to sound money and let markets, not bureaucrats, set interest rates. If the Fed won’t go quietly, Congress must force open its books. Every penny of this $2.5 billion must be accounted for. The Fed’s independence has gone too far. Congress must rein it in with audits and budget controls. Scrap the beehives, terraces, and private elevators. Build a functional office, not a palace. The Federal Reserve’s $2.5 billion headquarters rebuild is more than a waste of money; it’s a symbol of everything wrong with centralized power. While Americans struggle under the Fed’s inflation and rate hikes, it’s splurging on a Taj Mahal for unelected elites. This isn’t just bad policy—it’s a betrayal of the American people. The Fed’s time is up. It’s time to abolish this relic of 1913, restore sound money, and put economic power back in the hands of the people. Let’s demand transparency, accountability, and an end to the Federal Reserve’s reign. The future of our economy depends on it.

Written By Tatenda Belle Panashe

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