Bloomberg News
WASHINGTON — House Financial Services Committee ranking member Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., sent a letter to a pair of bank trade associations representing large banks whether they have initiated any internal compliance changes in response to the
“Given the unlawful and unconstitutional actions of the Trump Administration to force the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) staff to stop all work, including supervising the largest banks for compliance with consumer financial protection laws, there are no financial cops on the beat supervising national banks for consumer compliance,” Waters said. “Furthermore, CFPB staff have been ordered not to finalize any pending litigation, several of which involve cases alleging wrongdoing by some of your member banks.”
The Trump administration’s
The Department of Justice
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell
“Consumers should enjoy equal treatment and protection under the law. Given the Trump Administration’s reckless decision to try to go around Congress to unilaterally ‘delete’ the CFPB, however, they have created an unlevel playing field where community banks and credit unions are being scrutinized for consumer compliance while megabanks are not,” Waters said in the letter, shared with American Banker.
Waters sent the letters to the Financial Services Forum, which represents the largest banks, and the Bank Policy Institute, whose membership roster includes large and regional institutions. Waters asked the groups to provide information on whether member banks have reduced the number of employees handling consumer compliance, if any of the banks had submitted tips to the CFPB’s tip line to identify whether the CFPB enforcement or supervision staff complied with the stop-work order, whether the banks have pending litigation dismissed, and other details on how the banks are handling consumer compliance.
Waters also asked if the trade groups or the banks are considering legal action to make sure that sensitive data, including supervisory confidential information, about the banks providing payment services isn’t shared with White House advisor and ostensible leader of the Department of Government Efficiency Elon Musk in light of the billionaire’s
“No one has been able to independently verify what information they’ve got and what they’ve done with that information,” Warren told American Banker earlier this month of DOGE’s access to the CFPB’s data. “This is a kind of conflict that we have literally never seen at the federal government level.”