News

The CFPB under the leadership of Russell Vought has dropped several high profile pieces of litigation against financial firms. WASHINGTON — The CFPB has dismissed its case against Reliant Holdings and ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) moved to make sweeping job cuts as the Trump administration looks refocus the agency's regulatory objectives with a smaller workforce.
More than 1,400 Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) workers were terminated from their positions on Thursday amid a broader Trump administration shakeup at the independent government ...
CFPB workers are reinstated after a court order, but many still can’t work Some employees have been placed on administrative leave and don’t even have their laptops back yet. by Lauren Feiner ...
If the CFPB doesn’t take immediate action, your state’s attorney general or legal services programs may still file a lawsuit against a bad-behaving company if you raise the issue to them, he said.
As the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in recent days has moved to dismiss at least 10 cases accusing companies of cheating consumers and paused about two dozen others pending internal ...
Leadership and staff at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) are clashing in court over whether the Trump administration is seeking to wind down the agency and if it has allowed workers ...
Feb 28 (Reuters) - The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on Friday dropped an enforcement action against the consumer credit bureau TransUnion (TRU.N), opens new tab, adding to the ...
The CFPB drops its enforcement lawsuits against Capital One, Rocket Homes and more Those suits were all filed under the agency’s previous director, who Trump fired just weeks ago.
Likewise, the CFPB dropped cases against the Berkshire Hathaway-owned Vanderbilt Mortgage & Finance, accused of steering borrowers toward unaffordable mortgages, and Rocket Homes, which the agency ...
“The CFPB has become a tool for progressive overreach, making it harder for small banks and lenders to serve their communities,” Senate Banking Chair Tim Scott, R-S.C., said.