Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
Why the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's Funding Structure Is Unconstitutional
The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals is right to notice that the CFPB is unique even among federal agencies that don't get their funding from Congress.

When the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) was created as part of the massive Dodd-Frank banking regulation bill in 2010, it was given a funding structure unlike that of any other federal regulatory agency.
That unique structure, it turns out, is also unconstitutional.
A three-judge panel on the 5th Circuit Federal Court of Appeals ruled this week that the CFPB's structure is unconstitutional because Congress has no control over the agency's budget, which is funded entirely by the Federal Reserve. Under the terms of Dodd-Frank, the CFPB is entitled to receive a budget totaling up to 12 percent of the Federal Reserve's annual operating expenses, and the Federal Reserve is not allowed to refuse the CFPB's requests for funding.
"Congress's decision to abdicate its appropriations power under the Constitution, i.e., to cede its power of the purse to the Bureau, violates the Constitution's structural separation of powers," Judge Cory Wilson wrote in this week's ruling.
At issue in the case before the 5th Circuit was a 2017 rule issued by the CFPB that affected payday lending companies. The judges invalidated that rule, despite noting that the agency did not overstep its authority in issuing it. Rather, they found that "without its unconstitutional funding, the Bureau lacked any other means to promulgate the rule."
That's an outcome that opens up bigger questions about the constitutionality of everything the CFPB is charged with doing. In short, even if the agency has the authority to regulate wide swaths of the financial sector, it cannot do so until Congress adjusts its funding mechanism to comport with the constitution.
"This is a victory for accountability, as our Constitution's structure encourages political accountability by giving Congress a powerful lever—decisions about funding—to influence the behavior of unelected bureaucrats," Devin Watkins, an attorney for the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a free market think tank that's long been critical of the CFPB's regulatory agenda, said in a statement.
It's the latest blow to the CFPB's structure, which was designed to insulate the agency from political influence—making it effectively unaccountable.
In 2016, a three-judge panel at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ruled that the CFBP's unelected and largely unaccountable director must be able to be fired by the president. "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," wrote Judge Brett Kavanaugh, who would later be appointed to the Supreme Court, in that ruling.
This week's ruling is a deeper cut to the CFPB's power. Even as she criticized the ruling as "lawless and reckless," Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.), acknowledged in a series of tweets that the courts were "throwing into question every rule the CFPB enforces."
But that's exactly what should happen when a federal agency is blatantly—and by design—violating the fundamental rules for how the federal government is supposed to operate. That is exactly the role of the court system.
But don't tell that to some critics of this week's ruling, like Vox legal correspondent Ian Millhiser, who described the 5th Circuit's ruling as relying "on a novel reading of an obscure provision of the Constitution."
That "obscure provision" is Article I, which gives Congress the sole authority over setting the budgets of federal agencies. And the "novel reading" is, well, the plain text of Article I, which gives Congress the sole authority over setting the budgets of federal agencies.
Millhiser also parrots the talking point of CFPB spokesperson Sam Gilford, who told Politico that the ruling ignores the fact that several other federal agencies are funded outside of the annual appropriations process, including the entire Federal Reserve system and agencies like the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
But the CFPB made exactly that argument to the 5th Circuit, and the court dismissed it as being a comparison that "mixes apples with oranges."
"Congress did not merely cede direct control over the Bureau's budget by insulating it from annual or other time-limited appropriations. It also ceded indirect control by providing that the Bureau's self-determined funding be drawn from a source that is itself outside the appropriations process—a double insulation from Congress's purse strings that is 'unprecedented' across the government," Wilson wrote in the court's ruling. "Even among self-funded agencies, the Bureau is unique. The Bureau's perpetual self-directed, double-insulated funding structure goes a significant step further than that enjoyed by the other agencies on offer."
So, no, the CFPB is not like other federal agencies that are funded independently of Congress' purview. It has a wholly unique structure, one that is finally getting the constitutional scrutiny it deserves.
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Wait. Just yesterday Vox told me this decision is a completely batshit insane ruling from a bunch of Trump crazies that has no basis in the law whatsoever.
Who am I to believe?
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which is funded entirely by the Federal Reserve
There you have it. Congress chartered the Fed with a unique duty and the CFPB is part of that duty. Therefore there is nothing unconstitutional about it.
Let Congress change it and leave the activist judges out of the process.
And fuck payday lenders.
Payday lenders young enough for you? Do you think it means kids who have an extra candy bar?
Would you prefer the poor have zero options for loans? Poor credit makes getting any loans for ANY reason difficult.
But it must be nice to know how to live somebody's life for them.
No, the poor should get low interest loans that the rest of the taxpayers eventually have to pay off. That never goes wrong.
Would you prefer the poor have zero options for loans? Poor credit makes getting any loans for ANY reason difficult.
Did you see what the practice at issue in the suit was? Some payday loan companies were continuing to try and withdraw funds from customers' bank accounts after multiple failed attempts. Sometimes, they would try multiple withdrawals on the same day. This was causing the customers' to rack up fees with both their bank and the payday loan company. People could even have their banks close their accounts. The only purpose of this seemed to be to increase the fees the payday loan company would get and/or increase the amount they would send to a collection agency.
So, the CFPB issued a rule that they would need to get specific authorization again from a borrower after two failed attempts to withdraw funds from their bank accounts. The 5th Circuit did not rule in favor of the payday loan companies on this issue, instead finding that the rule was not "arbitrary and capricious" or otherwise outside of its authority. It only ruled in their favor based on the funding structure of the agency.
If you've never gotten a payday loan (I have), then you may not recognize just how vulnerable the borrower is in that arrangement. Something else that such lenders frequently fought against was a requirement to clearly post to borrowers what the annualized interest rate would be of the fees they charge. Basically, if a borrower has to keep taking loans out again and again for a whole year, they would end up paying over 200% to the company. That makes credit card companies look downright generous by comparison.
Payday lenders love to present themselves as helping working class borrowers that would otherwise have nowhere else to turn to keep the lights on or buy their kids food, but the reality is that they are making a lot of money on people's desperation. They structure their business to extract as much as they can from borrowers. And keeping them dependent on their services is a good way to do that.
Millhiser also parrots the talking point of CFPB spokesperson Sam Gilford, who told Politico that the ruling ignores the fact that several other federal agencies are funded outside of the annual appropriations process, including the entire Federal Reserve system and agencies like the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
Say, while we’re on the subject of unconstitutional agencies…that sure is a nice house of cards you’ve built there. Sure would be a shame if something happened to it.
Also, just by the way, fuck FDR in particular.
Fuck Woodrow Wilson.
Kaiser Wilhelm was a bad dude who ran some bad boys
Well damn.
No one has ever said this in the last twenty two years.
(Unless you count every right wing fanatic extremist insurrectionist who ever spoke)
Blatantly racist. This is Elizabeth Warren's baby and they're obviously sticking it to the only Native American senator we have by declaring this unconstitutional.
She should be happy. The court is just pushing America back in time (slowly) to when her people roamed the plains in ignorant bliss.
As long as we have the commerce clause everything is constitutional.
The truly astonishing thing is that the people who created and defend the CFPB, which was designed to be entirely unaccountable in personnel and budget from oversight by elected officials, will turn around and tell you that they're pro-democracy.
Didn't you get the memo? Anything the democrats do is democratic. Also anything that is intended to help one of the Democratic Party demographics is democratic.
It’s even in their name!
Democrats are democratic in the same way that socialists are social, communists are communal, or SuperSlim supplements make you slim.
Communists, socialists, and fascists frequently tell you that they are “pro-democracy”. What they mean is that they are in favor of election and voting procedures that put them into power. Just read Marx for details.
But anti-populist.
Our leftists are insanely jealous of the EU apparatchiks. It’s good to see some sanity remains in the courts.
Gosh! And it only took the Federal Courts twelve years to determine that something that was passed in 2010 was unconstitutional. I guess the tortoise will not be losing any races to the 5th Circuit!
"the CFPB's structure, which was designed to insulate the agency from political influence" is only true if you do not believe Democrats utilize political influence. Th he whole point over this structure and their attempted secession scheme was to permanently shield this agency and it's economy destroying powers from Republican influence.
The term “marker” is used to refer to the paintball gun in most cases. The name is derived from the fact that it marks where you have shot your opponent with a paintball.
So Why are Paintball Guns Called Markers The term “marker” originated from the US Forest Service, which used paintball guns to identify trees destined for lumberjacks at a distance.
Paintballs are small capsules filled with gelatinous material that breaks upon impact, staining clothing or skin with color or white chalk powder.
How it is funded is probably the least of the CFPB’s problems. The major problems with it are that it vacuums up vast amounts of private financial data, and that it exercises semi-fascist control over a significant part of the US economy.
(Oh, and thank you Joe Biden, for making it acceptable in public discourse to accuse politicians of being semi-fascists, because we can finally call you and the Democrats out for what you actually, objectively are.)
The Federal communications commission also fits this category. Their operations are funded by charges for license fees, but their main revenue source is from selling electromagnetic spectrum to companies like starlink and cell phone companies. It is many billions of dollars of revenue, and some of that is deposited back in the treasury, but how much they give back to the treasury is not part of congress's budget process.
It’s funny how, just a generation ago, it was the Left screaming something is unconstitutional. Now, there is no mention of something’s constitutionality, just whether the end is desirable.
LOL.. You know what other Nazi(National Socialist)-Empire agencies are UN-Constitutional?
About 100 years ago leftards conquered the USA per its very definition for their "New Deal" Nazi-Empire. UR about 100-years late on caring about the US Constitution. Now it's just Nazi-"democracy"/[WE]-mob-rules tyrannical governing this nation. As it turns into a stinky toilet pot as all Nazi-Empires do. Will people ever learn from history.
If only one consumer is saved...
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ruled that the CFPB's funding mechanism is unconstitutional as a violation of the Appropriations Clause and the Constitution's structural separation of powers and vacated the Payday Lending Rule (Payment Provisions) as a byproduct of this mechanism.
Regards: Why are Paintball Guns Called Markers