Oral Argument: Trump v. Cook | “For Cause” Federal Reserve Fracas
Oral Argument: Trump v. Cook | “For Cause” Federal Reserve Fracas  
Podcast: SCOTUS Oral Arguments and Opinions
Published On: Wed Jan 21 2026
Description: Trump v. Cook | Argument Date: 1/21/26 | Docket Link: HereOral Advocates:For Petitioner (Trump): D. John Sauer, Solicitor General, Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.For Respondent (Cook): Paul D. Clement, Alexandria, Virginia.Question Presented: Whether Federal Reserve Board governors possess Fifth Amendment property rights in their offices and whether "for cause" removal authority permits presidential removal based on pre-office conduct.Overview: President Trump's 30-minute ultimatum removal of Fed Governor Cook over mortgage misrepresentations creates unprecedented constitutional crisis testing presidential power against central bank independence and due process rights.Posture: D.C. Circuit denied emergency stay by 2-1 vote; Governor Cook continues serving pending appeal.Main Arguments:• Trump (Petitioner): (1) Federal offices constitute no Fifth Amendment property interest under longstanding precedent; (2) "For cause" permits broad removal discretion for misconduct affecting fitness including pre-office conduct; (3) Presidential removal determinations remain unreviewable by courts absent explicit congressional authorization• Cook (Respondent): (1) Tenure-protected officers possess constitutionally protected property interest requiring pre-removal hearing under Loudermill; (2) "For cause" historically limited to in-office conduct under 1913/1935 statutory backdrop; (3) Judicial review prevents presidential circumvention of congressional restrictions protecting agency independenceImplications: Trump victory eliminates due process protections for principal officers while expanding presidential control over independent agencies through discretionary "for cause" interpretations. Cook victory establishes constitutional hearing requirements for tenure-protected removal while constraining presidential authority to politicize Federal Reserve monetary policy decisions affecting national economic stability.The Fine Print:• 12 U.S.C. § 242: "Any member of the Board may be removed for cause by the President"• Fifth Amendment: "No person shall be...deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law"Primary Cases:• Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill (1985): Tenure-protected public employees possess property interest in continued employment requiring pre-termination notice and hearing opportunity• Taylor v. Beckham (1900): Political offices constitute no property rights protected by Due Process Clause; removal from office triggers no constitutional process requirementsLink to Opinion: TBD.Website Link to Opinion Summary: TBD.Timestamps:[00:00:00] Oral Argument Preview[00:01:51] Oral Argument Begins[00:02:00] Trump Opening Statement[00:04:02] Trump Free for All Questions[00:27:07] Trump Round Robin Questions[01:00:10] Cook Opening Statement[01:02:05] Cook Free for All Questions[01:30:37] Cook Round Robin Questions[01:56:24] Trump Rebuttal