The National Economic Council chief Kevin Hassett is suddenly the name to beat in the race to replace Jerome Powell at the Federal Reserve. Prediction markets are leaning his way, President Donald Trump cheekily hinted that he “knows who he’s going to pick,” and the White House said they are aiming for a Christmas reveal. But among the economists and former colleagues who’ve known him for years, the reaction ranges from enthusiastic to deeply uneasy.
To his supporters, Hassett is a brilliant policy architect and, as longtime ally Stephen Moore puts it, a “hard money guy” who will defend the dollar. To some of his former peers, however, he has morphed into something far more concerning as an advisor to the president: a political loyalist willing to sacrifice institutional independence—and

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