Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Supreme Court to decide constituti­onality of Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

- Tribune News Service The Los Angeles Times

The Supreme Court said Monday it would decide on the constituti­onality of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, created in the wake of the 2008 Wall Street collapse and funded directly by the Federal Reserve.

The case poses a threat to an array of independen­t agencies, including potentiall­y the Federal Reserve.

The court’s conservati­ves have been skeptical of the notion that agencies can operate outside the direct control of the president and Congress. But it is not clear how far they will go to rein in these agencies, all of which were created by Congress.

The issue is before the court now because the Biden administra­tion moved quickly to challenge a ruling by the 5th Circuit Court in New Orleans that held the CFPB has been operating illegally because it is “no longer accountabl­e to Congress” for its annual budget.

If the high court’s conservati­ve majority agrees, it could cast doubt on the Federal Reserve as well because the Fed relies on bank fees and interest income for its operating expenses, not an annual appropriat­ion from Congress.

In her appeal on behalf of CFBP, Solicitor General Elizabeth G. Prelogar called the lower court’s decision novel and wrong.

It “marks the first time in our nation’s history that any court has held that Congress violated the appropriat­ions clause by enacting a law authorizin­g spending,” she said.

She had asked the court to decide the case by June, but the justices voted to hear it in the fall.

The case involves both a high-level dispute over the Constituti­on’s separation of powers and a practical and political divide over the agency.

The CFPB was championed by Democrats, including now-sen. Elizabeth Warren, to protect consumers and borrowers from deceptive and unfair practices by banks and mortgage lenders. It has been steadily opposed by much of the lending industry and many Republican­s.

The current dispute began as a challenge to a proposed regulation of payday lenders. In ruling for the lenders, the three judges of the 5th Circuit, all appointees of President Donald Trump, said it violated the Constituti­on to shield the bureau from an annual fight over its appropriat­ion.

Judge Cory Wilson said the “bureau’s perpetual insulation from Congress’ appropriat­ions power, including the express exemption from congressio­nal review of its funding, renders it ... no longer accountabl­e to Congress and, ultimately, to the people.”

The Democrats who wrote the Dodd-frank

Act in 2010 tried to protect the bureau from political interferen­ce from the White House or Congress. The director was given a semiindepe­ndent status, and the bureau was authorized to obtain up to 12% of the annual revenues of the Federal Reserve for its operating expenses.

Last year, the bureau used $641 million of the $734 million that was available to it.

The Supreme Court’s conservati­ves have cast a skeptical eye on the bureau. Three years ago, the justices in a 5-4 decision rejected the independen­t status of the director and ruled that person could be removed by the president for any reason, including political difference­s.

The majority in the case of Seila Law v. CFPB consisted of the five Republican appointees while four Democratic appointees dissented.

The court, now with six Republican appointees, will consider the funding issue in the case of CFBP v. Community Financial Services Associatio­n of America.

In her appeal, Prelogar argued that throughout American history, Congress has set up agencies that were funded by fees and rates, not an annual appropriat­ion. She cited early examples of the Post Office, the Patent Office and the U.S. Mint.

In the 20th century, Congress adopted a similar approach for funding the Federal Reserve, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n and the National Credit Union Administra­tion.

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