According to the parliamentarian, zeroing out the CFPB budget is subject to a filibuster and so requires 60 votes–which the proposal would surely not get. The Senate majority can overrule the parliamentarian, but doing so would diminish the filibuster’s significance and would set a precedent for when Democrats recapture the Senate but lack the 60 […]
. . . is now available at Ballard Spahr’s Consumer Finance Monitor podcast.
In the National Mortgage News (may be behind paywall). Excerpt: Through a law enacted by Congress, the CFPB receives an amount of up to 12% of the Federal Reserve’s inflation adjusted profits in 2009. This new Senate plan would reduce that amount to 0%, completely cutting off money the agency’s dedicated workers used to hold financial […]
Data brokers are largely unregulated by federal law, despite efforts to fix that. According to Senator Wyden, the shooter obtained the legislators’ home addresses from data brokers. This is an area overripe for legislation. I hope no one else dies because of Congress’s failure.
Buy Now, Pay Later transactions (BNPL) are increasing dramatically. And for some folks, they are probably positive. But for others, BNPL can create significant problems. In case you don’t already know, the typical BNPL transaction enables consumers to purchase something by making four equal payments, one on the date of the purchase and the other […]
At Ballard Spahr’s Consumer Finance Monitor podcast. They broke the interview into two segments, with the second to drop next week; I am disappointed at having to wait until next week to hear the second half.
Some of the little work that the Administration has authorized the CFPB to undertake has been motions to withdraw amicus briefs filed in pending cases. In one case, though, a judge has in part rejected such a motion. In the case, Salom v. Nationstar Mortgage, the CFPB had filed an amicus brief explaining “explains why […]
So reports Kate Berry in an American Banker article, CFPB’s top enforcement official, Cara Petersen, resigns. Berry writes: “It has been devastating to see the Bureau’s enforcement function being dismantled through thoughtless reductions in staff, inexplicable dismissals of cases, and terminations of negotiated settlements that let wrongdoers off the hook,” Petersen wrote in an email, […]
In Pickett v. City of Cleveland, the defendant appealed the district court’s certification of a class of Black homeowners or residents who had been obligated to pay certain debts to a water utility that were secured by their property, pursuant to both Rule 23(b)(2) and Rule 23(b)(3). A panel of the Sixth Circuit unanimously affirmed the […]
We received the following call for papers and speakers: The Loyola Consumer Law Review is currently seeking authors and speakers for its upcoming March 2026 symposium, on the state of consumer protection in the United States during the second Trump administration. Scholars could explore how consumers have and will continue to be impacted by the […]