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CFPB’s Mulvaney defends his job leading watchdog

Democrats grill acting chief over lack of enforcemen­t action

- By Ken Sweet

WASHINGTON — Mick Mulvaney tried Wednesday to reassure Democrats on a House finance panel that he’s committed to punishing unscrupulo­us financial companies, while agreeing with Republican­s that the watchdog agency he runs needs to be reined in and refocused.

Mulvaney appeared before the House Financial Services Committee, his first appearance before Congress as acting director of Consumer Financial Protection Bureau since President Donald Trump named him to that position in late November. He continues to hold his other job as Trump’s budget director.

Since Mulvaney took over, the bureau has not issued an enforcemen­t action against any financial company and has dropped cases against payday lenders. He also has announced he would revise or revisit many of the rules or regulation­s that his predecesso­r, Obama-appointee Richard Cordray, put into place under his tenure.

Democrats criticized that record Wednesday. They worry that the CFPB under Mulvaney is taking a business-friendly approach at the expense of consumers. Mulvaney said the bureau continues to do its job, with numerous investigat­ions of financial companies in the works.

“We are still enforcing the law,” Mulvaney said. “I have not burnt the place down,” repeating a phrase he has often used to combat his critics.

Republican­s praised Mulvaney’s performanc­e at the CFPB. Mulvaney is the first Republican to lead the bureau since it was created under the Obama administra­tion.

Rep. Jeb Hensarling, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, said that while he still feels the CFPB is an unaccounta­ble, unconstitu­tional agency, Mulvaney’s actions since taking over have been a “welcome change.”

Hensarling, R-Texas, is a longtime critic of the CFPB, and has sponsored several bills that would either abolish or restrict the bureau’s capabiliti­es.

Meanwhile, congressio­nal Democrats refused to acknowledg­e that Mulvaney is the acting director of the bureau, referring to an ongoing court case in which the deputy director of the bureau, Leandra English, is suing, claiming that she is the true acting director.

“I want to be very clear that Democrats’ participat­ion in this hearing is not in any way an acknowledg­ment of Mr. Mulvaney’s legitimacy at the consumer bureau,” said Maxine Waters, the top ranking Democrat on the committee, in her prepared remarks.

Mulvaney told the committee that the bureau has 100 investigat­ions ongoing and 25 court cases pending against financial services companies, all cases or investigat­ions that he would have the authority to dismiss unilateral­ly as acting director.

The dynamic change in the roles of the questioner­s at the hearing represents a reversal from when the CFPB was led by Cordray. Democrats often saluted Cordray’s efforts to win financial relief for consumers while Republican­s complained that he oversteppe­d his mandate.

In prepared testimony, Mulvaney repeated the long-standing criticism that the CFPB, created fol-

“I should not be able to walk down the street and get a check for $700 million, no questions asked.”

Mick Mulvaney, acting chief of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

lowing the financial crisis, is too independen­t and its director too powerful. He outlined steps he said would make the bureau more accountabl­e to Congress and the president. He has urged Congress to pass a law that would subject the CFPB to the traditiona­l congressio­nal budget process, instead of getting its funds from the Federal Reserve. “I should not be able to walk down the street and get a check for $700 million, no questions asked,” he said.

Trump has not announced a new permanent director for the bureau. Under the law, Mulvaney can remain in his acting role until June 22, at which point he must vacate the office. If Trump nominates someone before that date, however, Mulvaney can remain in his acting role until the Senate confirms Trump’s nominee. It is expected that Trump will eventually nominate someone, but Mulvaney will remain in this role until the end of the year.

Mulvaney will testify in front of the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday, where he will face his most vocal critic in Congress: Sen. Elizabeth Warren, DMass. The CFPB was the brainchild of Warren, and a number of bureau employees look up to her.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/AP ?? Acting consumer chief Mick Mulvaney told a House finance panel Wednesday that “I have not burnt the place down.”
SUSAN WALSH/AP Acting consumer chief Mick Mulvaney told a House finance panel Wednesday that “I have not burnt the place down.”

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