Los Angeles Times

Trump asks high court for more control over CFPB

- Bloomberg

The Trump administra­tion is urging the U.S. Supreme Court to give the president more control over the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the agency that regulates mortgages and credit cards.

Asking the court to take up a pending appeal, Trump administra­tion lawyers said the Constituti­on requires that the president be allowed to fire the agency’s director for any reason. The 2010 law that set up the CFPB says the agency’s director can be removed only for “inefficien­cy, neglect of duty, or malfeasanc­e in office.”

The administra­tion’s position increases the chances the court will take up the issue in the nine-month term that starts in October. A ruling would come by June, months before the 2020 presidenti­al election.

The filing was a response to an appeal filed by Seila Law, a California law firm being investigat­ed by the CFPB over its sales pitches to indebted consumers. The firm is trying to derail the investigat­ion by arguing that the CFPB was set up in violation of the constituti­onal separation of powers.

In a brief filed Tuesday, U.S. Solicitor Gen. Noel Francisco agreed with the law firm that the CFPB’s structure is unconstitu­tional. But Francisco said the court should leave the bureau intact, and his brief left open the possibilit­y that the CFPB could continue to press the investigat­ion.

Francisco said the constituti­onal issue “has broad implicatio­ns for the president’s ability to supervise the executive branch.”

The administra­tion laid out its views on the CFPB for the Supreme Court last year but hadn’t previously urged the justices to put a case on its argument calendar.

The CFPB, set up after the 2008 financial crisis, regulates credit cards, auto loans and other consumer finance products. Supporters say its independen­ce helps insulate it from political pressures, letting it focus on protecting consumers from financial scams and predatory loans. Critics say it has stifled economic growth through overregula­tion.

During most of Trump’s first year as president, the CFPB had a holdover director, Richard Cordray, who pressed an aggressive regulatory agenda. Cordray, a Democrat, stepped down in November 2017 to begin an unsuccessf­ul campaign for governor of Ohio.

The current director, Kathy Kraninger, is a Trump appointee who was confirmed by the Senate in December 2018 by a 50-40 vote without any Democratic support.

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