President Trump’s newly installed Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau chief Russell Vought is closing the bureau’s
headquarters and has ordered staff to halt all of their supervisory
efforts, ramping up the administration’s attempt to revoke the financial
regulator’s authority.
Vought, the head of the Office of
Management and Budget who also became the acting director of the CFPB on
Friday, issued a notice to staff on Saturday demanding they “cease all
supervision and examination activity,” according to an email viewed by
The Wall Street Journal.
In an email sent to staff on Sunday,
Adam Martinez, the CFPB’s chief operating officer, said the bureau’s
headquarters in Washington, D.C., would be closed from Feb. 10 to 14.
“Employees
and contractors are to work remotely unless instructed otherwise from
our Acting Director or his designee,” Martinez said in his email, which
was viewed by the Journal.
Vought also said in a post on X on
Saturday that he “notified the Federal Reserve that CFPB will not be
taking its next draw of unappropriated funding.” The agency is funded by
the Fed.
Vought’s moves, in his first days in control of the
agency, could defang the financial regulator, a longtime goal of
Republicans and a recent target of Trump and Elon Musk.
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