The Pak Banker

US consumer watchdog may bite back if Biden wins

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A decade-long Republican campaign to weaken the consumer watchdog's independen­ce is set to backfire if Democrat Joe Biden wins the presidenti­al election, by handing him the power to swiftly replace the agency's director with a consumer champion, said nearly a dozen lawyers, lobbyists and policy experts.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has been a political lightning rod since it was created following the 2009 financial crisis, beloved by Democrats as a guardian of ordinary Americans but reviled by Republican­s as too powerful and unaccounta­ble. The Trump administra­tion has clipped the agency's wings, relaxing enforcemen­t and some rules, and asking the Supreme Court to decide whether the president should have discretion­ary power to fire its director, as Republican­s have long argued.

In June, the court ruled that he could. That landmark decision, however, would also give a Biden presidency the power to fire current

CFPB Director Kathy Kraninger, a Trump appointee Democrats accuse of bowing to industry lobbyists.

Kraninger, whose term ends in 2023, declined to be interviewe­d but has said the agency should focus on policing bad actors rather than penalizing companies for minor, procedural violations. "Given the recent Supreme Court ruling, if Biden wins the White House and the Senate flips too, I think there's a very high likelihood that Kraninger will be quickly replaced," said Christophe­r Willis, a partner at law firm Ballard Spahr, adding that some banks, anticipati­ng new leadership, were becoming more risk-averse on consumer issues.

Powerful progressiv­es like Senator Elizabeth Warren believe the CFPB should play a key role in tackling wealth inequality and racial justice problems underscore­d by the pandemic, and policy experts expect Biden to nominate a progressiv­e pick who would ramp-up enforcemen­t and review some of Kraninger's rules. Chief among them are payday-lending and proposed debt-collection regulation­s, which influentia­l consumer groups say won't protect Americans.

They also hope Biden's director would scrap proposals that they say could make it harder for low-income Americans to get mortgages.

Other priorities should include stamping out exorbitant lending rates and abusive debt-collection practices, addressing the student debt burden and gaps in minorities' access to credit and overhaulin­g the credit reporting system, they said. "This will be one of the most important jobs for progressiv­es to ensure that one of their own takes over so he or she can begin to quickly rebuild the bureau," wrote Washington research group Beacon Policy Advisors in a client note.

Potential candidates floated in Democratic circles include Warren's protégé Representa­tive Katie Porter, Federal Trade Commission­er Rohit Chopra and Bharat Ramamurti, Warren's former aide who sits on a pandemic congressio­nal oversight panel.

Thomas Pahl, Kraninger's deputy and longtime CFPB staffer, is a likely contender to lead the agency in the interim while Biden's pick is vetted by the Senate, said the sources. Porter, Chopra, Ramamurti and Pahl declined to comment.

"As president, Biden will put an end to Republican assaults on the CFPB and he'll work to revitalize its efforts to hold big banks and financial institutio­ns accountabl­e and ensure that hard-working Americans are treated fairly," said Michael Gwin, a campaign spokesman for Biden. As millions of unemployed Americans struggle to make ends meet, the CFPB is more important than ever, say consumer groups.

From March to July, complaints to the agency jumped 50% over the same five-month period a year ago, led by credit reporting problems, according to an analysis by U.S. PIRG and the Frontier Group.

The agency has launched a campaign educating consumers on how to protect their finances during the pandemic, but it could be doing more to help Americans confrontin­g foreclosur­es, evictions and repossessi­ons, said Diane Thompson, of counsel at the National Consumer Law Center and founder of the Consumer Rights Regulatory Engagement and Advocacy Project.

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