Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
A Limited Victory for Limited Government as CFPB's Structure Ruled Unconstitutional
Tuesday's federal court ruling won't stop the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau from acting, but will give the president more control over its activities.

A federal court ruling that says the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is "structurally unconstitutional" won't stop the powerful federal regulatory agency from carrying out its agenda, but it's a small victory for limited government nonetheless.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia on Tuesday said the CFBP's unelected and largely unaccountable director must have more oversight from the president, a decision that echoes one major concern that has been raised by libertarians and conservatives since before the bureau was created in 2011 as part of the Dodd-Frank Act. The CFPB is a major element of that law, which was passed in the wake of the 2008 economic collapse and gave the government broad powers to regulate financial institutions.
In the ruling, a three judge panel took issue with the virtually unlimited power vested with the director of the CFPB, Richard Cordray.
"The Director enjoys significantly more unilateral power than any single member of any other independent agency," wrote judge Brett Kavanaugh in the unanimous opinion. "Indeed, other than the President, the Director of the CFPB is the single most powerful official in the entire United States Government, at least when measured in terms of unilateral power," by which the court said it mean "power that is unchecked by the President or other colleagues."
Regulatory agencies headed by a single executive must be directly accountable to the president, the court observed, while independent agencies authorized by Congress—like the SEC and the FCC—must have a multi-member commission at the helm. The CFPB was created by Congress but a political compromise during negotiations over Dodd-Frank left the bureau with a single executive.
That makes the bureau "structurally unconstitutional," Kavanaugh concluded. He noted that the ruling will have little effect on the day-to-day activities of the bureau, but giving the president more authority over the CFPB means there is greater potential to rein in the bureau's power—depending on the president, of course.
The CFPB is the creation of progressive darling U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Massachusetts, and the unchecked power of the board's director is a feature, not a bug, of the agency's design. In theory, the bureau is supposed to operate without being subject to political influences that could shape regulatory decisions made by other agencies or by Congress—similar to how the Supreme Court and the Federal Reserve work.
In reality, though, the board has used its unaccountable power to target small businesses, payday lenders, community banks and mortgage brokers.
One of those targets, a mortgage company called PHH Corp., brought the legal challenge that led to Tuesday's important ruling. The CFPB had fined PHH for referring customers to insurers who purchased reinsurance from a PHH subsidiary. The bureau said that maneuver constituted an illegal kickback, but PHH claimed the CFPB had overstepped its authority, Politico reported.
The PHH lawsuit is now a secondary issue, with the court's decision to tackle the structure of the CFBP taking center stage and, appropriately, getting the headlines on Tuesday.
The Reason Foundation (which publishes this blog) warned about the problems of having a single person running a vast regulatory agency like the CFPB as far back as July 2011, before Cordray was confirmed as the bureau's director.
"The current structure gives the Director too much authority to determine the breath of the CFPB's actions without any check and balances," wrote Carson Bruno, a policy analyst, in July 2011. "If (Republicans) cannot eliminate the CFPB completely, which would be the best option, converting the leadership to a multi-person commission, like every other regulatory body, will help ensure appropriate, balanced, and checked regulations."
In a lawsuit challenging the authority of the CFPB (a different lawsuit than the one decided by the DC Circuit on Tuesday), attorneys from the Competitive Enterprise Institute made a similar argument.
"The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's lack of checks and balances violates the Constitution's separation of powers," said Hans Bader, an attorney with CEI in June 2012. "It's director is like a czar. He is not accountable to anyone, and can't be fired even if voters elect a president with different ideas about how to protect consumers."
The director still can't be fired directly by voters, but if Tuesday's decision survives any future appeals, it would mean that the president could supervise, hire and fire the head of the CFBP for any reason.
Potentially, that creates a bunch of new problems. Most obvious is the potential for turning a powerful regulatory agency into a political pawn that can be wielded by future presidential administrations. That seems to undercut the very idea behind the creation of the CFBP—that it would be independent of political influence. Now, it will quite literally be subjected to political influence.
In a statement responding to Tuesday's decision, Warren called the ruling a "technical tweak" to the CFPB. She said the ruling is likely to be appealed and predicted it would be overturned.
Opponents of the CFPB, like the U.S. Consumer Coalition, said the ruling struck a blow against the legitimacy of the agency and called for further congressional action to bring the CFBP under additional oversight. "Congress must pass comprehensive Dodd-Frank reform that includes an overhaul of the CFPB, including a change in the leadership structure," said Brian Wise, the organization's president.
Tuesday's ruling does not put an end to the poltiical wrangling over the role of the CFPB, and may only add to it. In the meantime, though, the D.C. Circuit ruling is a win for limited government by forcing the CFPB director to be accountable to someone.
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Good decision, I guess, but Christ, grow a testicle already, judges.
Everything the commission has done up to now is invalid. So invalidate it. The office itself is invalid, so order it to be vacated.
Potentially, that creates a bunch of new problems. Most obvious is the potential for turning a powerful regulatory agency into a political pawn that can be wielded by future presidential administrations.
I thought turning this into an ordinary agency was the point of the decision.
Great big gobs of greedy grimy government.
I know a guy who used to work for DOJ but moved over to CFPB because as a G15 in DOJ his salary was limited, but under CFPB, those limits don't exist. So now he's making big bucks and CFPB is buying micro data like its popcorn.
He's the same guy who brought his wife and kid to my house for a visit prior to a backpack trip a few years back. When we started our hike, his girlfriend was introduced to me about 100 yards down from the trailhead.
Yikes!
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What Constitutional authority do the courts have to rewrite legislation or restructure a federal bureaucracy? They will call their decision to allow the continued operation of the CFPB an example of judicial deference or restraint. It strikes me as legislating from the bench by cowards who refuse to do their real job. The CFPB should be shut down unless Congress makes it Constitutional through legislation.
That was exactly my first reaction - how the hell do you claim this as a "limited victory" for limited government when the Courts have just re-asserted the right to re-write legislation? This is how you get abominations like the judge in KC that took over running the school district and because he didn't like the way it was funded and operated.
Dude, it's a penaltax
Duh
If I were a politician, I would craft huge, overreaching bills like Obama care simply because the courts obviously won't invalidate whole pieces of legislation anymore. I'd pack it with all sorts of goodies, knowing that if it passes I'd lose some to the courts but not all.
'but will give the president more control over its activities'
Huh. Limited victory indeed.
Upon further reflection, +1 right people in charge.
In other good news, Reason has now posted enough stories to force Robby's terrible, just the worst ever, PM links from the Hit'n'Run side panel.
"Indeed, other than the President, the Director of the CFPB is the single most powerful official in the entire United States Government, at least when measured in terms of unilateral power," by which the court said it mean "power that is unchecked by the President or other colleagues."
Obo just wet his pants.
Lizzie Warren wanted the CFPB to be the teepee from which she ruled over the financial white man.
One of the stories that persistently floats around is that her political rage is directly attributable to the Republicans refusal to confirm her as the first chair of CFPB.
Fuck her.
Help yourself.
Imma say no thanks.
Tonto cry now.
Keep Fauxcahontas away from the firewater.
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Like I'm gonna take advice from a poster named rape.
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You said rape twice.
I like rape
Few faces reach the level of punchability that Elizabeth Warren has.
Horrible policy.
"You never want a serious crisis to go to waste, and, what I mean by that, it's an opportunity to do things you think you could not do before".
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pb-YuhFWCr4
Rahm Emmanuel
Barack Obama's Chief of Staff
That's why we have the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
Starting a bureau to protect Americans from the home loans because Obama bailed out the banks is like invading Iraq because of what some terrorist in Afghanistan did.
Dude it was a market failure. The CFPB is there to protect us.
Protect us from making choices for ourselves.
Whenever the government's there to help, why does it always seem like what they want to save us from is ourselves?
Who's gonna save us from them?
"Who's gonna save us from them?"
Great question. The answer: Another government agency.
Even if that's true, it must do it's worked in an approved way.
What really bugged me was reading that "The CFPB fined..." Why should they (or any other agency) be the prosecutor, judge & jury?
Write a regulation, OK. Investigate violations, OK. Then take it to a real, independent judge with a jury of 12 to determine guilt and assign penalties. At least have SOME checks and balances.
It was only a market failure after the market was sabotaged by government regulation.
The market says that lending large sums to people without means to pay it back it a losing proposition that shouldn't be engaged in. The government says that's not fair and forces the banks to issue sub-prime and types of risky loans. The banks try to find ways to spread the risk in order to avoid failure, but then it got to a point where the spreading infected the whole body and the house of cards ultimately collapsed.
And then the government demanded even more power to keep it from happening again.
But according to Hillary Clinton, all we had to do to prevent future financial crises is to raise taxes. Too bad she didn't share this insight with Christopher Dodd and Barney Frank and spare them the trouble of writing a 200 page bill.
And letting Chris Dodd and Barney Frank write "finance reform" laws is a lot like responding to a catastrophic fire by hiring arsonists to rewrite the building code.
So, I suppose the chair of the CFPB no longer has the power.
Potentially NSFW
This video is why I like you Biggie. =D
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AW-pj6tCVWA
"converting the leadership to a multi-person commission, like every other regulatory body, will help ensure appropriate, balanced, and checked regulations"
No, not really.
Look, a group of hacks has consensus, and as we all know, once consensus has been reached, there is no further room for discussion.
The bureau said that maneuver constituted an illegal kickback
Are legal kickbacks only for government employees and contractors?
Look, politicians know kickbacks when they see them. They're experts.
She looks good there.
She's no Jill Stein.
"power that is unchecked by the President or other colleagues."
Yeah like the Ottoman Empire. =D
+1 Janissary palace coup
Interesting R and D distributions for each grade
http://www.cato.org/publicatio.....rnors-2016
Making an unaccountable bureaucrat accountable to an unaccountable president is not the same as a victory for limited government, limited or otherwise.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vlad_the_Impaler
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ottoman_Empire
You suthen know what I am talking about.
Caption the photo:
"Geronimo!"
"Geronimo!" was an actual human being.
Warren is a piece of shit.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1-LxmdxHEFg
And an actual Indian.
Yes sir.
You two are terrible at this game.
Big squaw Fauxcahontas demand much wampum?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4gY2wtmcADo
For those of you who do not understand.
Who you rather live under a voluntary, free movement, free market, free association society, or be ruled under a forced, multicultural, empire ?
Be free to be ruled by a forced, multicultural free market empire.
You would love living under the Austrian-Hungarian Empire that Europe is trying to resurrect Diane. =D
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MeS6DvyLScE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zyTCtbYNzRg
High Cheek Bones Warren is looking to tomahawk rigged markets for her people.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BwK4R1pvHTQ
Yeah baby!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3p_OuMW4bfE
As bad as politicians are bureaucrats pose the greatest threat to our liberties. We must make lawmakers more accountable for writing open ended legislation (i.e. obamacare) that are then enacted by these unaccountable "civil servants" (an oxymoron of the highest order)!
Financial protection of consumers would mean showing how half a percentage point of Tea-Party zealot spoiler votes led George Waffen Bush to sign Executive orders packing the federal government with "faith-based" mystical fanatics. Then they could elaborate how the resulting berserker prohibitionist asset-forfeiture rampage wrecked the economy. The next step would be to subpoena the chick-bullying Texas-shamer to answer questions about how looter confiscation chased money out of banks and brokerages, destroyed liquidity and caused financial failures, then award all Bush Dynasty equity holdings to victims of the collapse.
Yeah, I'll cry a river for payday lenders, banks, and mortgage brokers. CFPB is great and they have personally helped me several times w/ my auto loan. I suggest you all contact them if you have issues w/ predatory lenders.
I am genuinely curious. What did CFPB do directly to help you personally?
You think you can make a comment buried in here and not expect us to ask for a detailed explanation?
And watch your rhetoric. These are real people whose lives are being ruined because of crazy commie shit like Operation Choke Point.
Or are you just another run of the mill progressive?
The floor is yours.
You would think that after 1 "bad experience," you would refinance to a different lender so that you didn't have to deal with the skeevy lender again. I know I've restructured my debt more than once based on things as trivial as how easy it was to pay the bill.
Of course, if by "helped you" you mean helped you not deal with the ramifications of missing your payments, then I have zero sympathy for you.
This thread needs more Michael Hihn.
EVERYTHING NEEDS MORE MICHAEL HIHN
MICHAEL HIHN!!
Won't last. Phonebook-sized laws and unaccountable bureaucrats are JUST TOO IMPORTANT to let constitutional limits get in the way.
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