Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh testifies to Congress on inflation and monetary policy
Photo: AP News
Economy Added 1h ago · originally reported 2h ago Why the delay? Events only appear once a second similar article confirms the story. Additionally, many feeds (especially Google News-proxied sources like CNN, NYT, WSJ, WaPo) can take 10-20+ hours to index new articles. The pipeline also runs every 30 minutes, so there's always some inherent lag. 2 outlets

Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh testifies to Congress on inflation and monetary policy

Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh delivered his first congressional testimony on July 14, 2026, pledging the Fed has 'no tolerance' for persistently elevated inflation while declining to signal the central bank's next rate move. Inflation as measured by the Fed's preferred gauge has reached 4.1%, well above the 2% target. Fed policymakers remain divided, with about half expecting a rate hike by year-end and nearly half penciling in no change or a cut.

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Divergence score
2 outlets covered it, splitting into 2 framing camps across 2 bias groups.
2 camps
2 bias groups
Market signalBETA
The spectrum · how 2 outlets placed this story
LeftCenterRight
AP News
Wall Street Journal
Horizontal = outlet biasColor = this story's framing
Supportive of action
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International angle
The split, in one line
Both outlets share the same headline quote and core fact; AP News goes deep on the divided Fed committee and Iran war oil price effects, while WSJ's coverage is a headline-only reference with no additional framing.
How each outlet covered it

Lightly covered so far

Too few outlets to map a left-right split. Here is each take as it stands.

Sparse coverage · 2 outlets
APAP NewsCENTER

“Warsh says Fed has 'no tolerance' for high inflation but provides no hints on next move”

WSJWall Street JournalRIGHT-CENTER2h ago

“Warsh Tells Congress the Fed Has 'No Tolerance' for High Inflation”

5 tracked claims across 2 outlets
Fact ledger
All5Claimed4Corroborated1
1/2
Claimed
Inflation has reached 4.1% according to the Fed's preferred measure, well above its 2% target
Corroborated
Disputed