President Donald Trump has said it more than once—the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is no more. Calling it “the ultra-left CFPB,” Trump said he moved to shut down the agency after receiving calls from bankers and loan officers who were “almost crying” over its regulations.
Lawyers for President Donald Trump's administration have denied that the White House intends to dismantle the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, apparently contradicting statements the president himself made to reporters earlier this month.
Republicans have had the US Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in their sights since its 2011 inception. With President Donald Trump back in the White House, they appear to be moving toward their goal of dismantling the federal watchdog,
President Donald Trump's administration was back in court Monday to justify its actions in dismantling of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). The union representing CFPB workers sued to stop the bureau from being shut down as part of Trump's government-wide cuts.
Lawyers for President Donald Trump's administration have denied that the White House intends to dismantle the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
President Donald Trump’s Consumer Financial Protection Bureau dismissed a case against a community-focused financial lending company on Friday. SoLo Funds is a peer-to-peer financial lending platform,
Twenty-three attorneys general from across the country are warning that President Donald Trump's efforts to defund and disband the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau would "significantly harm consumers" and "reduce oversight of big banks.
President Donald Trump appointed Russell Vought to head the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). Shortly after, Vought announced that he had notified the Federal Reserve that the CFPB would not take its next draw of unappropriated funding.
The executive appointments at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau top the list of noteworthy moves by President Donald Trump to hit banks in recent days.
Thousands of complaints submitted by Americans to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau alleging fraud or scams from private companies are going unanswered following President Donald Trump's efforts to dismantle the agency,