By ANN E. MARIMOW and COLBY SMITH NYTimes News Service
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WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Wednesday declined to allow President Donald Trump to immediately remove Lisa Cook from the Federal Reserve Board, saying it would instead review the administration’s efforts to oust her and reshape the central bank at oral arguments in January.

Top former Fed and Treasury officials and Cook’s legal team had warned the Supreme Court that permitting Trump to fire her while litigation over her status was underway would spur economic turmoil and undermine public confidence in the Fed.

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While the Supreme Court’s conservative majority has repeatedly cleared the way for the president to fire leaders of other independent agencies, the justices have recently signaled that the central bank is uniquely independent.

In its two-sentence, unsigned order Wednesday, the court deferred ruling on Cook’s status until after it heard arguments in the matter in January. The decision to take up the case means the justices will confront at least three testing Trump’s policies in their new term, which begins Monday. The court is already set to review some of the president’s most sweeping tariffs and his ouster of a leader of the Federal Trade Commission.

The legal battle over Cook’s firing has major implications for the central bank and its ability to set interest rates free from political interference. Every living former Fed chair — Alan Greenspan, Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen — joined former Treasury secretaries nominated by presidents of both parties to tell the justices in a court filing that Cook should be allowed to stay on the job while her case was being reviewed to ensure “stability of the system that governs monetary policy in this country.”

In the months since he returned to the White House, Trump has put public pressure on the Fed far exceeding that of his predecessors, with repeated demands that it lower borrowing costs. The president has also taken steps to add a political loyalist to the central bank’s board of governors.

Justice Department lawyers have defended the president’s actions, saying in court filings that he ousted Cook “for cause” for alleged mortgage fraud. The 1913 law that created the central bank sets a fixed tenure for Fed governors to serve “unless sooner removed for cause by the president.”

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