Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Mick Mulvaney Set to Weaken Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Mick Mulvaney Set to Weaken Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

While serving in Congress, Mick Mulvaney called the CFPB a "sick sad joke" and drafted legislation to abolish it. President Trump appointed him to lead the agency controlling it.

While serving in Congress, Mick Mulvaney called the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) a "sick sad joke" and drafted legislation to eliminate it. The financial crises during the Obama administration, brought about by Republican-led deregulation of Wall Street and banks during the Bush administration, prompted the creation of the consumer protection watchdog agency.



Trump Appointed Him

When President Donald Trump appointed Mulvaney to lead the CFPB, people were shocked. However appointing people who previously vowed to destroy an agency to head that agency has been a hallmark of the Trump administration.

Mulvaney was confirmed as Trump's appointee to head the Office of Management and Budget in February 2017. But Trump appointed him to serve as Acting Director of the CFPB under the Federal Vacancies Reform Act (FVRA), which allows the president to appoint an interim replacement without any Senate hearings or confirmation.

Trump utilized the FVRA to fill a number of positions in his administration. His choice to do so has come under fire for the frequency of its use. FVRA effectively allows anyone to serve in a high government position without vetting by Congress.

A 'New Mission' of the Bureau

The original mission of the CFPB involves protecting American consumers from predatory practices by financial institutions and limiting risks taken by a deregulated Wall Street. But a recent internal memo reveals plans to effectively neuter the consumer protection function of the agency and redirect its efforts.

The "revised mission and vision of the bureau" for 2018 through 2022, slated for Monday, directs the CFPB to "fulfill its statutory responsibilities but go no further." The bureau should also act "with humility and moderation."

Republicans Want the CFPB Shutdown

Many Republicans called for the CFPB to be shut down since inception, claiming it's too powerful. Within weeks of his interim appointment, Mulvaney worked to neuter the watchdog agency.

Under Mulvaney, the CFPB delayed a new payday lending regulation and dropped a years long investigation into one payday lender who contributed to Mulvaney's campaign. The new CFPB boss also dropped a lawsuit against Golden Valley Lending. The suit claims the lender illegally charges people up to 950 percent interest rates.

This latest move, however, drew some scrutiny for both Mulvaney and his boss.





More from People/donald-trump

unidentified female Trump supporter at MAGA rally
Eva Marie Uzcategui/Getty Images

MAGA Mom Goes Viral After Revealing Her Son Refuses To Talk To Her Because She Voted For Trump

While people grapple with how to handle family members and friends who voted against their basic human rights, the people in question are dealing with the fallout from their choices.

MAGA Republican President Donald Trump and the Republican Party's embrace of the Heritage Foundation's Project 2025 made clear the rights of women; ethnic, racial and religious minorities; the disabled; immigrants; and the LGBTQ+ community were at risk.

Keep ReadingShow less
Mike Lee
Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

GOP Senator Faces MAGA Backlash Over Plan To Sell Millions Of Acres Of Public Land

Utah Republican Senator Mike Lee is facing harsh criticism—including from Team MAGA—over his proposal to sell off millions of acres of public land in the American West owned by the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service to supposedly create more affordable housing.

Lee claimed in his proposal that there is an "extensive process for interested parties like States and local governments to nominate land for disposal to meet housing and community needs," noting that it specifically exempts national parks, monuments, and federally designated wilderness areas from potential land sales.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

Trump Ripped For Complaining That Americans Get 'Too Many' Federal Holidays Off Work

While it was ultimately former President Joe Biden who established Juneteenth as a federal holiday, President Donald Trump—who once campaigned on that promise—took to Truth Social on Juneteenth to whine about the number of "non-working holidays" Americans get, claiming that it costs businesses "billions of dollars."

Juneteenth is derived from June 19, 1865, when Union troops led by General Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston, Texas, and declared that all enslaved African Americans in the state were free.

Keep ReadingShow less
A woman sitting up in bed as a man sleeps next to her.
Florida State University Researchers Find Predictors for Infidelity in New Study
(Wodicka/ullstein bild via Getty Images)

The Biggest 'They're Definitely Cheating On Me!' Signs People Ignored

When our partner commits suspicious behavior, it's easy for us to jump to conclusions.

Most of the time, the conclusions we jump to are 100% wrong and are just our imaginations playing tricks with us.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @cassdamm's TikTok video
@cassdamm/TikTok

Woman Shares Why She Refuses To Tell Her Late Dad's Mistress Of 30 Years That He Died

While it doesn't always happen, sometimes we get to see karma at work—and sometimes, the revenge is sweet.

TikToker @cassdamm, who previously went viral for sharing the unhinged, five-page letter her 15-year-old son's principal sent, complaining about him "wandering the halls" and "being truant" for buying a drink on his way back to class, is openly celebrating the death of her father, but it's not for the reason you'd think.

Keep ReadingShow less