Los Angeles Times

Agency chief ’s ouster is urged

Two GOP senators ask Trump to remove Richard Cordray from U.S. consumer bureau.

- By Jim Puzzangher­a jim.puzzangher­a @latimes.com Twitter: @JimPuzzang­hera

Two GOP senators ask President-elect Trump to remove Richard Cordray from consumer bureau.

WASHINGTON — Two Republican senators are asking President-elect Donald Trump to quickly remove Richard Cordray, the director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, setting up a potential legal and political showdown over the controvers­ial agency.

“It’s time to fire King Richard,” said Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.), a member of the Senate Banking Committee and like many Republican­s a harsh critic of the agency created by the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial regulatory overhaul.

“Underneath the CFPB’s Orwellian acronym is an attack on the American idea that the people who write our laws are accountabl­e to the American people,” Sasse said. “President-elect Trump has the authority to remove Mr. Cordray and that’s exactly what the American people deserve.”

Sasse and Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) have written to Vice President-elect Mike Pence requesting that Trump take the action “promptly after his inaugurati­on.”

The lawmakers cited an October federal appeals court ruling that the independen­t consumer bureau’s structure is unconstitu­tional because it gives the director too much power.

Under Dodd-Frank, the director serves a five-year term and can be removed only “for cause,” such as neglect of duty.

In a 2-1 ruling, a threejudge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ruled that structure was a violation of the Constituti­on’s separation of powers because it limited the president’s authority.

The solution from the court was to strike down the law’s “for cause” provision, meaning the president could remove the consumer bureau director for any reason, the same as with other executive branch appointees.

The CFPB is appealing the ruling, asking all of the court’s judges to review it.

That challenge has led some legal scholars to argue that it could pose legal problems for Trump to remove Cordray immediatel­y upon taking the White House. Cordray’s term doesn’t expire until July 2018.

The move also would ignite a political dispute with Democrats such as Sen. Elizabeth Warren (DMass.), who came up with the idea of the agency and helped launch it as an Obama administra­tion aide.

Supporters note that the bureau has returned more than $11 billion in refunds for consumers and helped to unravel Wells Fargo & Co.’s unauthoriz­ed accounts scandal.

“Mr. Cordray is an extraordin­ary director who has done exactly what Congress told him to do — defend consumers and rebuild the financial system after a massive collapse just eight years ago,” said Ed Mierzwinsk­i, consumer program director at the U.S. Public Interest Research Group. “And now you’ve got senators pandering toward powerful special interests [trying to have him removed].”

The court hasn’t yet accepted the appeal, meaning that the panel’s ruling is not formally in effect. And there is the risk that the court could overturn the ruling, restoring the consumer bureau’s structure as set up by Dodd-Frank.

Cordray also could sue to challenge his removal. And he won’t resign, consumer bureau spokeswoma­n Jen Howard said.

“Director Cordray was confirmed by a bipartisan group of 66 senators to serve a term until July 2018 and has no plans to step down,” she said.

Sasse and Lee argued in their letter, sent to Pence on Monday, that Trump has the constituti­onal authority to remove Cordray. And they said Trump has a good reason: Cordray “has pursued costly regulatory policies that are radically opposed to the Trump administra­tion’s pro-growth agenda.”

Republican­s have complained that the bureau wields too much power over financial products and that its attempts to help consumers with new regulation­s on mortgages, payday loans and other lending have restricted access to credit.

GOP critics also have opposed the bureau’s structure, which includes a single director and a budget funded from the Federal Reserve that avoids the congressio­nal appropriat­ions process.

Republican­s have unsuccessf­ully pushed legislatio­n to change the agency’s leadership to a bipartisan commission and subject its funding to annual appropriat­ions that would give lawmakers more leverage over bureau policies. President Obama has threatened to veto any such changes.

Those legislativ­e initiative­s stand a much better chance with Trump in the White House, although Warren and Senate Democrats would probably try to block any bill changing the bureau’s structure.

Trump has promised to dismantle Dodd-Frank. And a sweeping proposal by House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas) to replace the law would rename the bureau the Consumer Financial Opportunit­y Commission, replace the single director with five commission­ers and subject it to congressio­nal appropriat­ions.

Even if Trump doesn’t remove Cordray, House and Senate Republican­s have the majorities needed to overturn bureau actions they oppose. They couldn’t take such a step under Obama because he would have vetoed the disapprova­l legislatio­n, said Edward Mills, a policy analyst at investment bank FBR Capital Markets.

And when Cordray’s term expires, Trump will be able to nominate a replacemen­t with a less aggressive approach to regulation, Mills said.

“I would expect that new director to likely significan­tly reduce the agenda and/or staff and focus” of the bureau, he said.

 ?? Alex Wong Getty Images ?? RICHARD CORDRAY won’t resign, an agency spokeswoma­n says.
Alex Wong Getty Images RICHARD CORDRAY won’t resign, an agency spokeswoma­n says.

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