San Francisco Chronicle

President can’t oust consumer director

- By Stacy Cowley Stacy Cowley is a New York Times writer.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s director can only be fired by the president for cause, a federal appeals court ruled on Wednesday, restoring security to a job that has become a political lightning rod.

When Congress created the bureau seven years ago, it specified that the director — after being nominated to a five-year term by the president and confirmed by the Senate — could only be removed for “inefficien­cy, neglect of duty or malfeasanc­e.” That standard differs from those in effect at most other federal agencies, whose leaders can typically be removed at will by a president.

Last year, a threejudge panel of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia found the bureau’s setup to be unconstitu­tional. On Wednesday, the full circuit court issued a ruling that vacated the earlier decision and upheld the constituti­onality of the consumer bureau’s structure.

There is “no constituti­onal defect” in the unusual independen­ce that lawmakers granted to the bureau’s director, the ruling issued on Wednesday said. The court added: “Congress’s decision to provide the CFPB director a degree of insulation reflects its permissibl­e judgment that civil regulation of consumer financial protection should be kept one step removed from political winds and presidenti­al will.”

The Trump administra­tion had argued in a court brief that the president should have the power to remove the agency’s leader at will. A Justice Department official said, “We are disappoint­ed in the decision and reviewing our options.”

The ruling, which can be appealed to the Supreme Court, stems from a lawsuit filed by mortgage lender PHH Corp. challengin­g the scope of the bureau’s authority and a $109 million fine levied against the company. PHH did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment about the ruling, which left in place an earlier decision throwing out the fine.

The appeals court decision came too late to protect the suit’s initial target, Richard Cordray, who resigned in November. Cordray, a Democrat appointed by President Barack Obama, took an aggressive approach to regulation that made him unpopular with the financial industry.

Cordray’s departure allowed President Trump to install his own acting director at the agency, Mick Mulvaney, the White House budget director. Mulvaney has dropped some of his predecesso­r’s lawsuits and investigat­ions, delayed new rules from taking effect and called for more “humility and prudence” at the bureau.

A spokesman for the bureau said, “We are analyzing the decision.”

Mulvaney’s appointmen­t is also the subject of a continuing court battle that the Trump administra­tion has prevailed in so far.

Cordray, who is now running for governor of Ohio, praised the appeals court’s ruling.

“Much more to be said, but today’s decision is all about maintainin­g independen­t law enforcemen­t free from politics,” he tweeted.

“We are disappoint­ed in the decision and reviewing our options.” A Justice Department official

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