Business & Economy

On The Money: Conservatives rally behind Moore for Fed | White House interviewing other candidates | Trump, Dems spar on Tax Day | Budget watchdogs bemoan ‘debt denialism’

Happy Tuesday and welcome back to On The Money. I’m Sylvan Lane, and here’s your nightly guide to everything affecting your bills, bank account and bottom line.

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THE BIG DEAL– Conservatives urge Trump to stick with Moore for Fed: Conservatives are rallying around economist Stephen Moore as President Trump’s controversial pick for the Federal Reserve Board faces a tough fight ahead.

Moore’s allies in conservative circles are urging the president and GOP Senate to stand by the controversial potential nominee, who is facing criticism from across the political spectrum and new questions about the White House’s support.

{mosads}”Steve’s view of the world is something that’s going to be brand new for the Fed and they need to hear it,” Arthur Laffer, a prominent conservative economist close to Moore, said in a phone interview. Laffer was among the Moore supporters who signed the letter.

But their efforts to build momentum for Moore, who has not been formally nominated and is still being vetted, faced fresh uncertainty on Tuesday. I explain why here.

 

White House mulling replacements: Larry Kudlow, director of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, told reporters that officials are interviewing other candidates to potentially replace Moore and Herman Cain, another nominee to the Fed board, as the president’s picks.

“We’re talking to a number of candidates. We always do,” Kudlow said. “Stephen Moore is in the process. We support him. We support Herman Cain.”

“We’ll just let things play out in the vetting,” Kudlow added.

 

But Moore’s supporters are urging the administration to stick by their pick:

 

The background:

 

LEADING THE DAY

GOP senators divided on Trump trade pushback: Senate Republicans are negotiating among themselves over how to respond to President Trump’s trade agenda as they brace for new tariffs on the European Union and a trade deal with China that some fear could leave American farmers worse off.

There are divisions over whether to send a stern message to the White House with a tough bill that’s likely to get vetoed — or a more modest proposal that could actually get Trump’s signature and become law.

It was a dilemma that GOP leaders eschewed altogether in the run-up to the 2018 midterm elections, deciding not to advance legislation curbing Trump’s power to impose tariffs for fear an intraparty fight could hurt voter turnout.

This year, however, there is strong support from influential members of the Senate GOP for reining in Trump’s tariff power but disagreement over exactly how to proceed, putting Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) in a bind. The Hill’s Alexander Bolton tells us why.

 

The dynamic:

 

The proposals:

 

Dems, Trump harden 2020 battle lines on Tax Day: Republicans and Democrats on Monday used Tax Day to drive home their arguments about President Trump’s 2017 law, as millions more Americans are poised to soon find out whether they personally benefited from the tax overhaul.

Trump and Republicans spent the day praising their tax-code rewrite and linked it to growth in the economy and wages.

Democrats, meanwhile, argued that the law has been more beneficial for corporations than for American workers. They highlighted their own tax proposals and pressed the IRS to comply with a formal request from House Democrats for six years of Trump’s tax returns. The Hill’s Naomi Jagoda has more here.

 

GOOD TO KNOW

 

ODDS AND ENDS