Los Angeles Times

SENATE OKS CFPB CHIEF

Consumer bureau will continue its industryfr­iendly shift after the GOP-led approval of Kraninger, experts say.

- By Jim Puzzangher­a

WASHINGTON — The Senate, in a party-line vote Thursday, confirmed White House aide Kathy Kraninger to head the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and experts predicted a continuati­on of the industry-friendly shift it has taken since President Trump installed an acting director last year.

Kraninger is a protege of acting director and White House budget chief Mick Mulvaney, an outspoken critic of the agency that was created in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis to prevent predatory lending and other abuses that led to it.

Democrats and consumer advocates have denounced him for sharply departing from the aggressive watchdog role the bureau had pursued under its first director, Obama appointee Richard Cordray, including scaling back enforcemen­t and moving to reassess tough new rules on payday loans and narrow the definition of abusive practices by banks and other firms.

Kraninger is expected to continue those initiative­s. But she will face tougher oversight than Mulvaney, a former Republican congressma­n, as Democrats take control of the House next year.

“I think she’ll largely manage the CFPB in the same way Mulvaney has, meaning that there will be less of an emphasis on enforcemen­t,” said Alan S. Kaplinsky, head of the consumer financial services group at law firm Ballard Spahr. “I don’t think there will be a lot of new regulation­s that are going to be proffered.”

Those expectatio­ns led to support for Kraninger’s nomination from banks and other financial firms, some of which could be emboldened by her confirmati­on to a five-year term.

“I think there will be some in the industry that

will feel empowered to push the envelope,” said Ed Mills, a Washington policy analyst at brokerage Raymond James Financial Inc.

That’s what Senate Democrats fear. None voted to confirm her as director of the powerful, independen­t agency. The final was tally was 50 to 49, with only Republican­s supporting the nomination.

Kraninger, 43, has been a deputy of Mulvaney at the White House Office of Management and Budget. She told senators at her confirmati­on hearing this summer that Mulvaney was doing a good job at the CFPB, and in written responses to questions said that she couldn’t point to any actions he’d taken with which she disagreed.

Those responses and Kraninger’s lack of any consumer finance experience — her background is mostly in homeland security — infuriated Democrats.

“We know exactly whose side Ms. Kraninger will be on,” Sen. Sherrod Brown (DOhio) said in arguing against her confirmati­on last week. “She is with Mick Mulvaney, which means she is with Wall Street and the payday lenders and with the shady special interests.”

Republican­s said her management and budgetary skills made her qualified to become the nation’s consumer financial watchdog.

“I am confident that Ms. Kraninger is well prepared to lead the bureau in enforcing federal consumer financial laws, in protecting consumers’ sensitive personal financial informatio­n and in increasing its transparen­cy and accountabi­lity,” said Senate Banking Committee Chairman Mike Crapo (RIdaho).

Since March 2017, Kraninger has been the Office of Management and Budget’s associate director for general government, overseeing spending at the Department of Homeland Security and four other agencies.

She previously served as deputy assistant secretary for policy at the Department of Homeland Security during the George W. Bush administra­tion, and she also worked for the Senate Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee and the Senate Appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee handling Homeland Security funding.

The CFPB director can be removed by the president only for cause, so Kraninger probably would be able to serve deep into the next presidenti­al term even if a Democrat wins.

Cordray, a Democrat, served 10 months into Trump’s term before resigning in November 2017 to run for Ohio governor, a race he lost in November. During his tenure, the bureau had highprofil­e enforcemen­t cases against Bank of America Corp., Wells Fargo & Co. and other major financial institutio­ns, providing about $12 billion in refunds and debt relief to about 29 million consumers.

But Republican­s complained that Cordray was too aggressive in using the bureau’s authority, particular­ly in exercising a broad power to prevent “abusive acts or practices.”

His departure triggered controvers­y over who would serve as acting director based on succession provisions in two separate laws.

Trump appointed Mulvaney, leading to a legal challenge from Cordray’s chosen successor, Leandra English. English, who was the bureau’s deputy director, resigned in July and dropped her legal fight.

Mulvaney clashed with Democrats. A 36-page report last month from the Democratic staff of the Senate Banking Committee said he undermined the bureau’s mission to protect consumers and “put his thumb on the scale in industry’s favor.”

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who conceived the idea for the bureau and helped launch it as an aide to then-President Obama, sent an 11-page letter last week to senators arguing that Kraninger would perpetuate “Mulvaney’s efforts to turn the CFPB into a weak and partisan regulator.”

Publicly announced enforcemen­t actions have declined by about 75% under Mulvaney compared with the average in recent years, while the agency’s workforce has shrunk by at least 129 employees, according to a Washington Post analysis.

His tenure, though, included participat­ing this year in a $1-billion enforcemen­t action with the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency against Wells Fargo over consumer abuses related to the bank’s mortgage and auto loan businesses. It was one of the largest fines ever imposed by the agency.

Mulvaney commended Kraninger’s confirmati­on and indicated that he expected her to continue the change in direction he had engineered over the last year.

“Like all transition­s, it was not always as smooth as we would’ve all liked, but the bureau has emerged stronger for it,” he said.

Unlike Mulvaney, Kraninger will have to deal with a Democratic House majority. That means that Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Los Angeles), a strong CFPB supporter who is expected to become chairwoman of the House Financial Services Committee, will have the authority to summon Kraninger for hearings and examine the bureau’s performanc­e.

Waters said Thursday that she was committed to ensuring that the bureau’s “statutoril­y mandated mission is not undermined” as it has been under Mulvaney.

“He has done everything in his power to roll back consumer protection­s, strip the agency of its resources and compromise its independen­ce,” she said, calling on Kraninger “to put consumers first by rolling back the anti-consumer actions taken by her predecesso­r.”

Waters also plans to reintroduc­e legislatio­n unveiled in October to undo some of Mulvaney’s actions, such as his decision to strip enforcemen­t powers from the bureau’s fair lending office. Even if Waters’ bill doesn’t get through the Republican­controlled Senate, her oversight authority is important, Mills said.

“When all else fails, shame is a pretty powerful weapon,” he said.

Analysts expect Kraninger to follow through on Mulvaney’s plans to alter pending rules put in place by Cordray cracking down on payday and other shortterm loans. The industry opposed the rules, particular­ly a provision requiring lenders to more thoroughly review borrowers’ finances to make sure they can afford to repay the money.

“I think there will be significan­t changes to the ability-to-repay provisions,” Kaplinsky said. “They won’t do away with the rule altogether, but it will be significan­tly different.”

Mills expects Kraninger also to enact rules defining exactly what constitute­s abusive practices.

“If they can define it, that makes it harder for anyone in the future to use that authority in a way that financial services companies are fearful of,” he said. “What they hated about Cordray is they felt they could be fined for activities that they thought were OK.”

 ?? Alex Wong Getty Images ?? KATHY KRANINGER, a protege of White House budget chief Mick Mulvaney, was confirmed in a 50-49 vote. She will face tougher oversight than Mulvaney after Democrats take control of the House next year.
Alex Wong Getty Images KATHY KRANINGER, a protege of White House budget chief Mick Mulvaney, was confirmed in a 50-49 vote. She will face tougher oversight than Mulvaney after Democrats take control of the House next year.

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