Federal Reserve Staff Funds Democratic Party Lurch to Left

Federal Reserve Staff Funds Democratic Party Lurch to Left

Staffers of the Federal Reserve bank system are providing financial backing for the Democratic Party’s lurch toward the far left, a Washington Free Beacon analysis found.

Political donations from the Fed staff have a sharp partisan tilt toward Democrats. In the 2024 campaign cycle, 90.3 percent of contributions from Fed employees went to Democrats, according to Open Secrets. The site doesn’t yet have a tally of the political distribution of donations this campaign cycle, but the Fed staff are jumping in, pouring money into contested Democratic primary races and supporting candidates with extreme views that are hostile to free-market economics or to America’s traditional allies.

Among the Fed staffers who surfaced in a Free Beacon review were:

Hampton Finer, whose LinkedIn profile describes him as "head of Globally Systemically Important Bank Supervision," "Head of 70 person Function responsible for onsite and dedicated supervision of New York-based globally systemically important banks." Finer donated $2,000 in December 2025 to the congressional campaign of Brad Lander, who is running a primary against Rep. Dan Goldman, the incumbent Democrat. Lander has the endorsement of socialist senator Bernie Sanders and socialist mayor Zohran Mamdani and is running to cut off Israel’s Iron Dome defense against missile attacks from Iran and Hezbollah terrorists. Finer made previous, smaller contributions to campaigns for Congress by self-described socialist Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and by Rana Abdelhamid, also a self-described socialist.

Irfan Murtuza, whose LinkedIn profile describes him as senior counsel at a Fed division devoted to enforcement against unfair or deceptive acts or practices, gave $1,250 to the U.S. Senate campaign of Abdul El-Sayed, a Michigan Democrat who has backed defund-the-police activism and boasted about turning away from the American flag during the national anthem. El-Sayed told campaign staffers he would not take a position on the demise of Ayatollah Khamenei because "there are a lot of people in Dearborn who are sad."

Keshav Dogra, an economic research advisor at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York who described himself in a 2014 bio as a citizen of the U.K., has donated $750 this year to the congressional campaign of Claire Valdez. Valdez is a Mamdani-endorsed socialist whose launch video denounces what she calls "a system designed to extract from working people while protecting the wealth and power of the billionaire class." The video also promises Valdez will oppose "apartheid and genocide in Palestine." Dogra also donated to the campaign of Charializa Chevalier, another socialist, anti-Israel congressional candidate, federal campaign records show, and $2,100 to the campaign of Zohran Mamdani for mayor, city records show. At least seven other Fed employees also donated to Mamdani’s campaign.

Stefania D’Amico, whose personal website describes her as a "policy and research advisor" at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, donated $270 to socialist Senator Bernie Sanders in February 2026 and $250 in August 2025 to the campaign of Graham Platner, who launched his U.S. Senate campaign in Maine with a video—produced by Mamdani’s campaign aide Morris Katz—declaring "The enemy is billionaires."

Matt Malott, an engineer at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, donated $500 to Ocasio-Cortez in June 2025, federal campaign finance disclosure records indicate.

Finer, Murtuza, Dogra, D’Amico, and Malott did not respond to emails from the Free Beacon asking why they gave. A New York Fed official referred the Free Beacon to the bank’s code of conduct, which states, "an employee may not engage in political activity while on duty or on Bank premises, and must be extremely cautious to avoid any suggestion of Bank sponsorship or support of such activities."

The Fed has been the subject of an intense political battle, with President Trump and his Treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, sharply critical of "too late" Chairman Jerome Powell. Bessent said May 3: "If we think about the Powell Fed, if we think about monetary policy, ethics and supervision, they weren't great. Monetary policy, we had the worst inflation in 48 years. Ethics, we had five governors or regional bank presidents have to resign for ethical problems. And then we had three of the four largest bank failures in U.S. history." And that doesn’t even mention the $2.5 billion renovation of the Fed’s Washington headquarters building, which Powell has defended but Trump has described as a scandal.

Powell has said he plans to remain as a Fed governor after President Trump’s choice to be the next Fed chairman, Kevin Warsh, takes over. That’s unusual, and Powell has explained that the reason is his concern about "the series of legal attacks on the Fed which threaten our ability to conduct monetary policy without considering political factors." Powell declared at his most recent press conference, "It is extremely important, not for the people who work at the Fed at any given time, but for the people that we serve, that the Fed remain able to conduct monetary policy in a way that doesn't get pulled into politics, trying to help or hurt any particular politician or political party. It's critical for the people that we serve." Said Powell, "I worry that these attacks are battering the institution and putting at risk the thing that really matters to the public, which is the ability to conduct monetary policy without taking into consideration political factors."

There’s something mildly comical, or at least potentially hypocritical, about Powell accusing Trump of trying to politicize the Fed when his own staff are busy publicly donating to the full slate of Mandani-Sanders socialists. Sure, the Fed system has about 20,000 employees. They don’t lose their right to participate in politics when they accept a job at the Fed. Yet when the people setting interest rate policy and regulating financial institutions are also privately supporting politicians who want to ban billionaires and whose close aides say things like, "We have to get out of this trap of private property"—it doesn’t exactly inspire confidence. And for a central bank, losing the confidence of the public or of the markets can pose real risks.

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