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Supreme Court: CFPB Director Must Be Removable ‘At Will’

June 30, 2020

The Supreme Court yesterday held that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau may continue to operate, but ruled that the bureau’s single powerful director must be able to be removed at will by the president. The court said that the current legal framework under which the director may only be removed “for cause” is unconstitutional.

The court issued its ruling in a case involving a debt relief company called Seila Law, which asked the Supreme Court to hear its appeal of a 2017 civil investigative demand from the bureau. Seila Law resisted the CID on the grounds that the bureau’s structure is unconstitutional. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the CFPB’s structure in Seila Law, as did the full D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals in a separate 2018 ruling.

“Today’s decision from the U.S. Supreme Court on the constitutionality of the CFPB’s leadership structure resolves important questions surrounding the Bureau’s design and its future,” said ABA President and CEO Rob Nichols. “We still believe that Congress has an opportunity to strengthen the CFPB over the long term by converting the Bureau into a five-member, bipartisan commission as envisioned in drafts of the Dodd-Frank Act."

Nichols added that "this important change would balance the Bureau’s needs for independence and accountability, while broadening perspectives on rulemaking and enforcement. It would also ensure the CFPB's long-term stability, which would benefit consumers, financial institutions and the broader economy.” Read the Supreme Court’s decision.



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