Los Angeles Times

A demotion for consumers?

Overhaul at CFPB may include a new name and logo.

- By Jim Puzzangher­a

WASHINGTON — Mick Mulvaney’s overhaul of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is so extensive it now could include revising the agency’s name and discarding its simple, modern logo.

Mulvaney, installed as acting director by President Trump last fall, has taken to calling the agency the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection in formal correspond­ence. Then, this month, his staff unveiled the bureau’s first-ever official seal, which formalized that name, written in full above an eagle with its wings raised over a shield featuring symbols for justice, consumer financial security and transparen­cy.

Consumer advocates worry that the wording change and old-fashioned-

looking seal are part of a broader strategy by Mulvaney, an outspoken critic of the agency he now heads, to undermine its mandate by making it sound more bureaucrat­ic and de-emphasizin­g the word “consumer.”

He changed the bureau’s mission statement in December to make the top priority “identifyin­g and addressing outdated, unnecessar­y, or unduly burdensome regulation­s.” He also publicly declared that the bureau no longer would “aggressive­ly push the envelope” to protect consumers.

“I have no doubt that this goes hand-in-hand with their other efforts to stymie the bureau’s mission to protect consumers and hold industry accountabl­e,” said Karl Frisch, executive director of Allied Progress, a consumer watchdog group.

“The name change, the reconfigur­ing of its mission ... the new [seal], all of that is designed to dull the popular support the bureau receives when people hear about it by making it sound more bureaucrat­ic and less effective,” he said.

Under its first director, Democrat Richard Cordray, the bureau aggressive­ly pursued consumer abuses.

Since opening in 2011, it provided consumers about $12 billion in refunds and debt relief from financial institutio­ns. The bureau also played a key role in penalizing Wells Fargo & Co. after the bank created millions of accounts in customers’ names without consent.

The agency has yet to issue an enforcemen­t action under Mulvaney, a Republican who took over in a controvers­ial appointmen­t being challenged in court by Leandra English, the deputy director picked by Cordray to temporaril­y run the agency after he left.

There was a report this week that Mulvaney is considerin­g fining Wells Fargo & Co. hundreds of millions of dollars for its mortgagele­nding and auto-insurance abuses. But ahead of his first appearance before Congress on Wednesday, he formally asked lawmakers last week to sharply reduce the bureau’s authority.

Robert Niemi, a former mortgage regulator in Ohio and a senior advisor at law firm BakerHoste­tler, said the seal reflects a “re-branding” of the agency to show it will take a different approach than that under the Obama administra­tion.

“I think it’s just one of the ways they’re trying to signal that it’s a different bureau and it’s not the same as the previous administra­tion,” he said.

It’s unclear if Mulvaney plans to formally change the name of the bureau or replace its logo, which is still displayed at the top of the website.

A March 30 news release introducin­g the seal said that “over the next several months, the bureau will publicly incorporat­e the new seal in various ways.”

Spokespeop­le for Mulvaney did not respond to requests for comment.

The 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, which created the agency in the wake of the financial crisis, refers to it as the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection. But from the start under the Obama administra­tion, it was called the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) first conceived of the agency as a law professor. While serving as an aide to President Obama, she was put in charge of launching the bureau, which she stressed would be a more modern federal agency.

The bureau’s green-andwhite logo looked different from those of other agencies. It features the bureau’s acronym in lowercase with a spotlight extending out from the letter C. The agency is now popularly referred to by that acronym.

“Consumers are the foundation and the focus of our mission and our logo ref lects that,” according to the CFPB website. “A soft beam of light symbolizes our efforts to illuminate the financial landscape and foster transparen­cy in the marketplac­e.”

The news release introducin­g the seal said it “reflects the bureau’s mission through American imagery and references to the nation’s founding documents.”

The announceme­nt also noted the seal, which DoddFrank gave the bureau the authority to adopt and use, aligns with those of other federal financial regulators.

Some federal agencies have revised or changed their names before. The Department of War was changed to the Department of Defense after World War II. And Congress’ General Accounting Office changed to the Government Accountabi­lity Office in 2004 to reflect its broader scope.

There also have been politicall­y motivated name changes.

In 1997, House Republican­s changed the name of the Education and Labor Committee to Education and Workforce Committee. When Democrats took the House majority in 2007, they restored the old name. Republican­s took the majority in 2011 and again replaced labor with workforce.

Consumer advocates note that changing the bureau’s name could be costly and would be an unusual move for a Republican such as Mulvaney, who has complained in the past about its spending.

Lisa Donner, executive director of Americans for Financial Reform, a coalition that supports tougher regulation­s, said the bureau was structured to focus on consumers and the public. That was a change from other financial regulators, which focused on banks and financial institutio­ns, and the reason the bureau has become popular with average Americans, she said.

Changing the bureau’s name, as the seal does, represents a turn away from that view.

“Why would you want to put bureau first instead of consumer first?” she said. “It does seem like you do that if you want to take the emphasis away from consumers and put it on ‘this is a bureaucrac­y.’ ”

 ?? Jacquelyn Martin Associated Press ?? ACTING Director Mick Mulvaney has taken to calling the CFPB the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection, which critics say shifts the emphasis from consumers and makes the agency sound more bureaucrat­ic.
Jacquelyn Martin Associated Press ACTING Director Mick Mulvaney has taken to calling the CFPB the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection, which critics say shifts the emphasis from consumers and makes the agency sound more bureaucrat­ic.
 ?? Alex Wong Getty Images ?? THE CFPB’S chief has asked lawmakers to sharply reduce its authority. Above, supporters rally for the agency in Washington last year.
Alex Wong Getty Images THE CFPB’S chief has asked lawmakers to sharply reduce its authority. Above, supporters rally for the agency in Washington last year.

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