USA TODAY International Edition

Direction of CFPB now in Mulvaney’s hands

Ruling has him leading agency he has criticized

- Gregory Korte USA TODAY

WASHINGTON – In naming Mick Mulvaney to be the acting head of the federal government’s primary financial services regulator, President Trump is placing a loyalist in charge of what was designed as a semi-independen­t federal agency.

A federal judge ruled Tuesday that Trump could indeed name his budget director to temporaril­y lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, an Obama-era creation that grew out of the 2008 financial crisis.

Mulvaney’s appointmen­t puts the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau into uncharted waters as it experience­s its first change in party control in its seven-year history.

But Mulvaney, also director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, isn’t just any caretaker director.

At OMB, he’s responsibl­e for coordinati­ng the president’s federal regulatory policy — but he will also head up the CFPB, which Congress set up specifical­ly to be outside the president’s direct influence.

He’s a budget director in charge of what is effectivel­y an off-budget federal agency, with the CFPB relying on transfers from the Federal Reserve System rather than annual appropriat­ions from Congress.

And he’s a long-standing critic of the agency he’s now in charge of. Mulvaney has even called the bureau a joke “in a sick, sad way.”

All of that puts Mulvaney in a position to shape the future of the CFPB — created by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act in 2010.

“The story here is the future of the CFPB and why this person is one of the most unqualifie­d and unsuitable people to head it,” said Mike Calhoun, president of the Center for Responsibl­e Lending, a consumer advocacy group. “It’s a secondary story that they’re trying to rush him in under this procedure.”

On Tuesday, a federal judge in Washington ruled that the president can appoint acting agency leaders.

Mulvaney tweeted out a photo of himself getting to work.

On his first day in the job — after crossing the street from his office in the White House complex bringing doughnuts to his colleagues — Mulvaney imposed a 30-day moratorium on new regulation­s, froze hiring and put a temporary hold on payments to victims of illegal banking practices.

“You should expect that this agency will stay open. Rumors that I’m going to set the place on fire or lock the doors or blow it up are completely false,” Mulvaney said.

“That said,” he continued, “anybody who thinks that a Trump administra­tion CFPB would be the same as an Obama administra­tion CFPB is simply being naïve. Elections have consequenc­es at every agency, and it includes the CFPB.”

Mulvaney, a former Republican congressma­n who is already spearheadi­ng the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to roll back regulation­s across the federal government, now controls an agency whose decisions impact any American with a checking account, mortgage, credit card or consumer loan.

Among the issues at the top of the bureau’s agenda: Payday lending: The CFPB published a rule this month requiring that payday lenders document that a borrower has the capacity to repay a loan, and bars those lenders from continuous­ly trying to withdraw electronic

funds from borrower’s bank accounts.

Because it’s a final rule, rescinding it would likely require an act of Congress or a lengthy regulatory process that would send the rule back to the drawing board.

Debt collection: The bureau has been drafting a rule to address complaints of abusive debt collection practices, which are the single biggest source of complaints to the federal government about any industry. That rule requires the CFPB to consult with small businesses that would be affected by the regulation. Overdraft fees: Financial institutio­ns steer consumers into overdraft protection programs that cost $15 billion in fees last year, according to the CFPB. The bureau is studying more disclosure requiremen­ts and other regulation­s to help consumers understand their overdraft options.

“You should expect that this agency will stay open.”

 ??  ?? Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., speaks at a protest rally outside the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau headquarte­rs in Washington on Tuesday. Mick Mulvaney was named the CFPB’s acting director. MANUEL BALCE CENETA/AP
Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., speaks at a protest rally outside the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau headquarte­rs in Washington on Tuesday. Mick Mulvaney was named the CFPB’s acting director. MANUEL BALCE CENETA/AP
 ??  ?? Mick Mulvaney
Mick Mulvaney

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States