Chattanooga Times Free Press

CFPB investigat­ing controvers­ial writings of Trump’s appointee

- BY KEN SWEET

NEW YORK — The nation’s financial watchdog has opened a formal investigat­ion into writings and comments by Eric Blankenste­in, a Republican appointee overseeing the agency’s anti-discrimina­tion efforts, in who alleged that most hate crimes were fake and argued that using racial epithets did not mean a person was racist.

Mick Mulvaney, the acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, asked the Federal Reserve’s Inspector General Office this week to investigat­e the writings.

The CFPB does not have its own inspector general’s office, and uses the Fed’s inspectors when necessary.

Blankenste­in is one of a handful of political appointees that joined the CFPB after Mulvaney took over the bureau roughly a year ago.

Blankenste­in’s official title is policy associate director of the Office of Supervisio­n, Enforcemen­t and Fair Lending, and is in charge of all bureau investigat­ions into possible discrimina­tion by banks and other financial companies. He is also one of the highest paid federal government employees, making more than $250,000 a year.

The controvers­y over Blankenste­in’s previous comments started in late September, when The Washington Post published a story on his writings on a blog more than a decade ago. In one post, from 2004, Blankenste­in said using a particular racist word to describe a black person did not mean a person was racist, just foolish, he said, using an obscenity to describe a foolish person. In the same post, Blankenste­in stated that hate crime hoaxes happen three times more often than actual hate crimes. The posts were written under an online alias, where Blankenste­in used his initials.

Blankenste­in initially dismissed The Washington Post’s story, saying

little could be gleaned from his writings, when he was 25 years old. However, Blankenste­in quickly retreated from that position as outrage grew among CFPB career staff, including from his immediate subordinat­e.

The president of the union that represents CFPB employees sent a letter last week to Mulvaney and Congress expressing deep concerns about Blankenste­in continuing in his current role.

The National Treasury Employees Union “believes that every federal employee should have a workplace where they are confident they are treated fairly and without discrimina­tion,” Union President Tony Reardon said. “In speaking with our members at CFPB it is clear to me that those under Eric Blankenste­in’s leadership do not have this confidence.”

Blankenste­in has now apologized for his previous statements, saying in an email to CFPB employees, “the tone and framing of my statements reflected poor judgment.”

Left-leaning and consumer groups, who have by and large been outraged over Mulvaney’s businessfr­iendly changes to the bureau, have pressed hard for Mulvaney to fire Blankenste­in.

Mulvaney, for the most part, has backed Blankenste­in. At a town hall in Louisiana on Thursday, Mulvaney said Blankenste­in’s writings were an “internal management and employee issue for us.”

“We are handling this internally,” Mulvaney said. When asked further by a reporter if he had confidence in Blankenste­in, Mulvaney said “Oh, sure.”

The latest volley came from Allied Progress, a consumer group that has been sharply critical of Mulvaney’s policies, which sent a letter to the Federal Reserve’s inspector general’s office this week asking him to also investigat­e an Amazon “wish list” of Blankenste­in’s. The wish list includes a book called “A Troublesom­e Inheritanc­e: Genes, Race and Human History,” a 2014 book that argues the rise of Western power in the world was possibly due to genetic superiorit­y.

“Consumers have a right to know if Blankenste­in, who was hand-picked by Mulvaney to oversee fair lending enforcemen­t at the CFPB, was pining for a book as racially charged and controvers­ial as the blog posts he once wrote,” said Karl Frisch, director of Allied Progress, in his letter.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ANDREW HARNIK ?? A sign stands at the constructi­on site for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's new headquarte­rs in Washington.
AP PHOTO/ANDREW HARNIK A sign stands at the constructi­on site for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's new headquarte­rs in Washington.

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