Category Archives: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

The CFPB’s current proposal to the court is inadequate.

As we noted on April Fool’s Day, the CFPB has proposed to the court a dramatic cut in the CFPB staffing. If only it were in fact an Apri Fool. American Banker’s Kate Berry has more here. Bloomberg’s Evan Weinberger has this paragraph in his story on the proposal: The cuts may still be “draconian,” […]

Trump administration proposes cutting CFPB staff by two-thirds

The proposal is here. It can’t go into effect until the preliminary injunction in the NTEU case is lifted. The administration claims the plan would “allow CFPB to continue meeting its statutory obligations while expanding on the reforms that have dramatically increased its efficiency and stewardship of taxpayer funds, in line with Presidential and Congressional […]

Paper on how consumer protection enforcement is going away

Alisher Juzgenbaye, a Northwestern JD/Ph.D student has written The Vanishing Enforcer: Consumer Protection in an Era of Dual Retrenchment. Here’s the abstract (the paper left out the third source of retrenchment: arbitration clauses): Recent developments, including reductions in the federal workforce, effective suspension of certain enforcement activities, and attempted centralization of independent agency rulemaking in the […]

ProPublica: TransUnion and Experian are providing relief to fewer consumers who complain to Trump’s CFPB than they did for consumers who complained to Biden’s CFPB

Here, by Joel Jacobs. According to the article, “TransUnion’s relief rate, which had remained relatively steady for several years, began plunging in the summer of 2025. By October it was providing relief roughly half as often” and “Experian’s drop was even more dramatic. The company resolved nearly 20% of complaints in consumers’ favor in 2024. […]

Paper defending the CFPB

Amelia O’Rourke-Owens has written Tearing Holes in Consumer Protection, Democracy’s Safety Net. Or: 2-4-6-8, Dodd-Frank is pretty great! 3-5-7-9, policymakers must save the CFPB just in time! Here’s the abstract: Financial protection laws safeguard all individuals regardless of wealth, race, or age. Indeed, they impact nearly every person living in the United States, as it’s impossible […]

Hypocrisy on the CFPB

As we have reported in the past, the Dodd-Frank Act requires that the CFPB’s director “shall appear before the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs of the Senate and the Committee on Financial Services and the Committee on Energy and Commerce of the House of Representatives at semi-annual hearings.” But it appears that Acting Director […]

District court rejects challenge to application of TILA and RESPA to PACE financing

Several states have adopted laws creating Property Assessed Clean Energy (PACE) financing systems for certain residential energy and home improvement projects. Under these programs, a homeowner borrows money to finance the project, and the loan is repaid through an assessment on the homeowner’s property tax bill. The lender’s lien generally has priority over mortgage liens, […]

The American Prospect: The Student Loan Report the Trump Administration Didn’t Want Published

Here. Here’s an excerpt from the story (not the report itself) about an omitted section: The college pricing section focuses on the role universities themselves play in the student loan crisis. The sticker price for college tuition has risen at more than double the rate of inflation since the year 2000. Most students don’t pay […]

American Banker: Vought capitulates to court order, asks for CFPB funding

Here, by Kate Berry (behind paywall but available on Lexis). Excerpt: Last month, District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson ruled that Vought‘s refusal to request funding for the CFPB violates an existing injunction. She found that the combined earnings of the Fed means “everything the Federal Reserve earns.” Her order made it clear that a failure to seek […]