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Is that green smoke over the Eccles Building? We have a new Fed Chair nominee!

President Donald Trump named Kevin Warsh , once the youngest Fed governor, now a think tanker and academic lecturer, to lead the Federal Reserve. In today’s newsletter, we’ll have everything you need to know about this nominee, plus a quiz to test your econ knowledge against other Marketplace fans. 

First though, let’s turn to Minneapolis. Thousands protested against the White House’s aggressive, deadly immigration crackdown here for the second Friday in a row. Hundreds of small businesses also shut their doors in an “economic blackout” last week, but sacrificing foot traffic on a second Friday is tougher — and the push for a general strike has gone nationwide.

Our colleagues at Minnesota Public Radio have the latest reporting on ICE activity in the state, and we’ve been talking with business owners about what the strike means to them. —  Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
A sign reading “Donation location until ICE relocation” is posted in the window of Northern Coffeeworks, a coffee shop in Minneapolis.
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Small businesses weigh how to support the strike protesting ICE
Many businesses who support the shutdown are facing a tough choice. Marketplace’s Carla Javier asked how they decided what to do today.

Fany Gerson, owner of Fan Fan Doughnuts and Mijo in New York City, proposed three options to her staff this week: “We can either stay open business as usual … or we could stay open and give a portion or the entire sales to an organization that we all agree upon, or we close.”

Gerson said the vast majority of her employees are immigrants. Everyone chose to shut down, she said.

“I don't know if we can really afford to, but this is just a bigger — and what was most important to us, even though we don't know exactly like the financial hit,” Gerson said.

As federal lawmakers continue to debate funding for the Department of Homeland Security, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement, activists and grassroots organizations around the country have called for what they’re calling a “national shutdown” Friday, Jan. 30, to take a stand against ICE action in Minnesota and elsewhere.

They’re calling for no school, no work, no shopping. It’s inspired by the general strike last Friday in Minnesota where hundreds of businesses closed their doors and thousands of people took to the streets in protest.

Nationwide, small business owners who support the shutdown in principle weighed the difficult decision of whether to close or stay open.

In Wisconsin, TJ Semanchin, owner of Wonderstate Coffee, said it’s important to him to keep showing solidarity with the movement, even if there’s a financial cost. 

“Between lost sales and paying our staff, you know, it's probably less than $10,000 but it's in that ballpark,” he said.

But not everyone can do that.

Caroline Glover, co-owner of Annette, a restaurant, and Traveling Mercies, a bar, in Aurora, Colorado, said this is a tough time of year. 

“For us, closing down on a Friday night at the end of the slowest month of the year just was not a business decision that we could do, you know we … couldn’t support our staff financially if we did that,” she said.

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News you should know

Let’s do the numbers

  • Wall Street was down today as investors absorbed the news of Trump’s pick to lead the Fed. The S&P 500 made up some losses from earlier in the day to close off 0.4%.The Dow lost 0.4% and the Nasdaq fell 0.9%.

  • From gold rush to gold crush: The precious metal fell double digits today, while silver tanked 30%. They had been growing like meme stocks as investors sought safe haven.

  • Why aren’t oil companies eager to jump into Venezuela? ExxonMobil and Chevron posted their lowest annual profits since 2021 today. 

More on immigration and collective action

  • ICE just got an extra $75 billion from last year’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Can a national strike really get the agency to pull back? We asked some experts.

  • That funding boost has allowed federal agents to ramp up surveillance on immigrants and citizens alike. Check out some of the tech DHS is using as part of its recent surge.

  • The idea of a general strike dates back at least as far as 1886, when workers nationwide walked off the job for an 8-hour workday. Check out this timeline.

Artificial intelligence

  • Catch up on the series we ran all week about the AI economy — reported from the empty data centers and well-funded startups of Silicon Valley.

  • ChatGPT added advertising this month, but AI has been reshaping the digital ad market for years.

Elsewhere in Big Tech

  • Silicon Valley has been quiet on immigration, and those who have spoken up couched any criticism in praise for Trump. 

  • In trials starting this week, Meta and YouTube will defend themselves against claims that their social media platforms are knowingly addictive and harmful to children.

  • Five and a half years passed between Trump’s initial calls to ban TikTok and a Trump-brokered deal to spin off the app’s American business from Chinese ownership. Rest of World has a great timeline charting the whole saga.
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Immigration plays a critical role in the health and stability of the American economy, but the tensions at the intersection of immigration, politics and policy can make these stories harder to tell.
 
Join Marketplace’s chief content officer, Joanne Griffith, in conversation with immigration reporter Elizabeth Trovall and deputy managing editor Jon Gordon about their reporting process and how they go about sourcing for this critical coverage.

It's just for Marketplace Investors — but any donation makes you one. Give today to get your invite!
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QUOTE OF THE DAY
"I have known Kevin for a long period of time, and have no doubt that he will go down as one of the GREAT Fed Chairmen, maybe the best. On top of everything else, he is ‘central casting,’ and he will never let you down."
—  President Donald Trump, posting on social media about Kevin Warsh, his nominee to lead the Federal Reserve

Warsh is a bit more hawkish than others Trump considered to lead the central bank, which is a bit surprising given the President’s relentless, unprecedented pressure for lower interest rates. But Warsh has been critical of the Fed under current Chair Jerome Powell, recently calling for “regime change.” 

The Senate will have to confirm Warsh. Powell’s term ends in May, though he can stay on as a Fed governor until 2028. 

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Final note
Are you smarter than a 12 grader?

I didn’t take economics in high school, I don’t think it was even offered, but that was a long time ago. Today, more states are requiring a basic crash-course in capitalism, and it’s giving students a healthy skepticism about the whole system.

How does your econ knowledge stack up? Find out by taking our news quiz, which has a special focus this week on economics 101. I missed one question, but I’ll let you guess which one.

TAKE THE QUIZ
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