Showdown Looms as Trump, Flouting Dodd-Frank, Says CFPB Hater Mulvaney to Head Agency

A battle appears to be brewing between the White House and the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau (CFPB), with each having named a different individual to serve as acting director of the agency, and President Donald Trump’s appointment denounced as “legally dubious.”

The showdown gained steam on Friday afternoon when Richard Cordray, who had been leading the CFPB since its inception, tendered his expected resignation, saying he was leaving at the end of the day. Another key event that day was the CFPB naming Leandra English as deputy director of the agency. She had been serving as the agency’s chief of staff.

That latter development ( a “serious Jedi move,” according to one observer) was important because “Under the Dodd-Frank Act that created the CFPB, English would thus become acting director,” the Associated Press notes. 

Cordray also cited Dodd-Frank in his outgoing letter to colleagues for why she would now fill the role of acting director.

Hours after Cordray resigned, however, the White House issued a statement announcing that head of the Office of Management and Budget Mick Mulvaney would serve as acting director of the CFPB until a nominee is confirmed  by the Senate.

Mulvaney, it should be noted, has criticized the CFPB as “a joke in a sick, sad sort of way”;  said “I don’t like the fact that CFPB exists, I will be perfectly honest with you”;  co-sponsored legislation to kill the CFPB, and called the agency “the very worst kind of government entity.”  As such, his appointment follows a trend of Trump appointments.

Some observers say there are now dueling appointments. According to Bloomberg:

Federal officials doubled down on Saturday on Trump’s authority to appoint Mulvaney, Reuters reports. Others however, including CFPB architect Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), vehemently disagree.

Economist Dean Baker says  it’s clearly English who should now be at the helm. He writes that some of the reporting on the likely showdown has ignored

Warren, for her part, tweeted Friday evening: “The Dodd-Frank Act is clear: if there is a @CFPB Director vacancy, the Deputy Director becomes Acting Director. @realDonaldTrump can’t override that.” She also included the text of that provision. Minutes later, she tweeted: “.@realDonaldTrump can nominate the next @CFPB Director – but until that nominee is confirmed by the Senate, Leandra English is the Acting Director under the Dodd-Frank Act.

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Cordray retweeted those tweets from Warren.

Mike Calhoun, president of Center for Responsible Lending, echoed Warren, pointing to Dodd-Frank as evidence for English assuming the acting director post.

“The Wall Street reform law, which passed in 2010, clearly states that if there’s a CFPB Director vacancy the Deputy Director becomes Acting Director,” he said.

“Naming Mick Mulvaney—someone who’s adamantly anti-consumer—rewards financial predators and fails to put consumers first. Polls have consistently shown that the public, across all party lines, want a strong CFPB to look after their interest, not the interest of abusive financial actors,” Calhoun said.

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