Europe’s fragile unity against Russia and China is unraveling.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz admitted that the EU is powerless without U.S. support, while
Hungary accused Brussels of hypocrisy over Russian oil.
Slovakia openly defied Kyiv and Brussels, with Prime Minister Robert Fico clashing on camera with President Volodymyr Zelensky just days after meeting Vladimir Putin.
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk conceded Europe’s failures and appealed directly to Donald Trump, while also attacking Hungary and Slovakia for aligning with Moscow and Beijing. The cracks inside Europe are now impossible to hide.
Every week political cartoonists throughout
the country and across the political spectrum apply their ink-stained
skills to capture the foibles, memes, hypocrisies and other
head-slapping events in the world of politics. The fruits of these
labors are hundreds of cartoons that entertain and enrage readers of all
political stripes. Here's an offering of the best of this week's crop,
picked fresh off the Toonosphere. Edited by Matt Wuerker.
Stephen Miran, White House Council of Economic Advisers Chair and President Trump’s nominee for the Federal Reserve Board, told Senators he would take an unpaid leave of absence from his White House role if confirmed.
His testimony sparked sharp criticism from Democrats, with one Senator calling the move 'absolutely ridiculous' and arguing Miran’s independence was already compromised.
Who is Stephen Miran? Donald Trump's Pick for Key Federal Reserve Role
President Donald Trump
on Thursday announced his intent to nominate Stephen Miran, chairman of
the White House's Council of Economic Advisers, to the Federal Reserve
Board of Governors.
Miran would temporarily fill the seat left
vacant by Biden appointee Adriana Kugler, who is stepping down Friday.
If confirmed by the Senate,
Miran would serve until January 31, 2026. Miran's nomination is likely
to raise concerns over political influence at the Fed, an institution
long prized for its independence.
What to Know About Stephan Miran, Trump's Pick for Federal Reserve Board of Governors
Last November, Miran proposed measures aimed at devaluing the U.S. dollar
to boost exports, curb imports, and narrow the trade deficit—a central
goal of Trump's economic agenda. Miran also suggested that implementing
tariffs could pressure key trade partners, including the European Union
and Japan, into accepting a weaker dollar through what he dubbed a
"Mar-a-Lago Accord," referencing the 1985 Plaza Accord that successfully
depreciated the dollar's value.
In March 2024, while serving as a
fellow at the conservative Manhattan Institute, Miran also advocated
for significant changes to the governance of the Federal Reserve. His
proposals included making it easier for the president to remove members
of the Fed's board of governors—an idea that could sharply erode the
institution's traditional independence from political influence.
Adriana
Kugler, the departing governor and a Biden appointee, supported
Powell's position that interest rates should remain steady while the Fed
assesses the inflationary effects of Trump's tariffs. The Fed held
rates steady at 4.3% during its meeting last week, though two
Trump-appointed governors—Christopher Waller and Michelle
Bowman—dissented.
"The Fed's current governance has facilitated
groupthink that has led to significant monetary-policy errors," Miran
wrote in a policy paper co-authored with Dan Katz, who now holds a
senior position at the Treasury Department.
Even with Miran's appointment, many of the Fed's 12 voting officials
remain wary of inflationary pressure from Trump's policies. After the
July jobs report, Miran criticized Powell again, asserting that Trump
had been proven right on inflation in his first term and would be again.
"What
we're seeing now in real time is a repetition once again of this
pattern where the president will end up having been proven right," Miran
said on MSNBC. "And the Fed will, with a lag and probably quite too late, eventually catch up to the president's view."
Miran
earned his Ph.D. in economics from Harvard University in 2010. Prior to
joining the Trump administration, Miran was a senior strategist at
Hudson Bay Capital Management, co-founded Amberwave Partners, and served
as an adjunct fellow at the Manhattan Institute. He previously held a
senior economic policy advisory role at the U.S. Treasury in the first
Trump administration.
The Federal Reserve, commonly known as the Fed, was
established in 1913 with the passage of the Federal Reserve Act, signed
into law by President Woodrow Wilson. Its creation followed a series of
financial panics, particularly the Panic of 1907, which exposed the need
for a central banking system that could stabilize the U.S. economy. The
Fed was designed to provide the country with a safer, more flexible,
and more stable monetary and financial system. Over the years, its role
has evolved significantly, especially after major events like the Great
Depression and the 2008 financial crisis.