01/07/2025 | Press release | Archived content
This presentation is being made by a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau employee and does not constitute legal interpretation, guidance, or advice of the CFPB. Any opinions or views stated by the presenter are the presenter's own and may not represent the CFPB's views.
Thank you, Jeremy. It's such an honor to be introduced by one of the leading thinkers in the country on banking law and systemic risk.
More than twenty years ago, I was a student sitting in an auditorium just like this here at the University of Michigan. If back then you had told me that one day I would be the General Counsel of a government agency, I would have encouraged you to check your crystal ball for defects. To be honest, if you had told me that four years ago, I probably would have said the same. I owe a debt of gratitude to CFPB Director Rohit Chopra for many things, but almost certainly at the top of that list is the way he thought differently about what kind of lawyer should be General Counsel at a government agency. And not for the first time, I have come to deeply appreciate his vision.
The topic that I wish to discuss with you is a big one, which cuts to the heart of our democratic values and the discontent that so many people feel today. Having been the General Counsel and a Senior Advisor to the Director at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau for the last three years, I would like to share some lessons about how lawyers can help ensure that the government actually delivers on the promise and intent of the law. My job has been to ensure that the CFPB is thinking about how to faithfully administer the laws passed by our elected representatives, so that the organization can meet the challenges that people face today. We are very proud of the work that the CFPB has done to ensure that the consumer financial marketplace works for every American, especially in light of the rapid "digital transformation" of the economy that has affected so much of our lives. Yet I can also tell you with confidence that the frustration so many people feel with so many aspects of our society reflects real failings in our institutions: the law, the legal system, and even our democracy itself.
I believe that the challenges with our institutions have a few fairly straightforward questions at their core:
From my experience, the answers to these questions today are too often "no." Helping to run a government agency and leading a top-notch legal team through many battles, I have seen first-hand these questions being asked in earnest each and every day. And while we have had plenty of success, I am nonetheless consistently left with the gnawing sense that the answers are undermining our democratic self-governance.
The CFPB has over the past three years achieved much to address the issues and concerns and practices that so many people are facing. But I am speaking to you now because I am not sure enough people realize how hard-fought our successes have been - and how much harder it may be across policy areas in the future.
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I think it's fair to say that, at most organizations of any size, the General Counsel's office is involved in nearly everything that the organization does. At the CFPB, I have sought to make the General Counsel's office more than where the people who are trying to get stuff done make a quick stop, hoping to check a box. I have worked to ensure that all of the unbelievably talented staff at the CFPB are thinking about what can and must be done to address the challenges people are facing in their everyday lives so that our government actually makes a difference. And to fight back against the undemocratic forces that today have rigged the law to serve as a sword and shield for the rich and powerful.
As many of you know, the CFPB was created after the Great Financial Crisis so that the government would never again fail to protect Americans' fundamental financial security.1 The work of the CFPB is to help ensure everyday people get a shot at a good life - to provide for their own futures, and that of their families.2 Our mission is to ensure that the market for consumer financial products and services is "fair, transparent, and competitive."3
To the average person, that translates into things like: "When I borrow money to buy a car to get to work, will the loan set me up to fail?"4 "When I pursue an education and a chance for a better life, will I be scammed into taking out loans for a worthless credential and a lifetime of debt5 - targeted because I'm a woman, or because I'm Black?"6 "If I lose my job and need to talk to someone at a financial institution, will they answer, or will a 'chatbot' give me the run-around?"7 "When I sell my house, will I be able to get a fair price, or will I need to 'whitewash' the photos on the wall so that the appraiser doesn't know who I am?"8
I could go on. These are issues that affect hundreds of millions of people,9 and they especially affect those with the least resources in our society who are often the ones most easily taken advantage of.10
I believe that we in the government - including and indeed especially the lawyers - have the awesome responsibility of making sure that what we do actually makes a difference for the American people. That's the test: whether the pages and pages of laws and regulations - the words and the footnotes and the citations - are improving people's lives.
I want to be clear. I am not saying that we at the CFPB have been perfect. But by trying to make our government work for working people, we have learned some important lessons about how the government should administer the law, as well as the state of the law and legal system today.
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The first lesson I want to share is that making the law work to actually address people's concerns, as Congress intended, necessarily requires thinking about how the law applies to modern circumstances and contemporary problems. Our job as lawyers is not simply to know the ins and outs of the laws we administer, but to understand what is happening in society around us.
The CFPB was created in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis when subprime mortgages blew up entire communities and took down the global economy with it. Before that crisis, consumer financial protection was spread around a diffuse set of regulators, none of which had consumer protection as their number one priority.11 These regulators ignored signs that banks and other financial institutions were setting people up to fail with loans that they could not possibly pay back, pursuing profits in the Wall Street flavor of that day - "mortgage-backed securities" and the financialization of consumer lending markets.12 Whole business models were built on the premise that big business could get rich even if consumers failed.13 Although some state regulators recognized and tried to combat these trends, federal regulators did little to protect consumers from abusive practices and even stepped in to block state efforts.14 And when the housing market collapsed, not only did individual people suffer, but the global economy was thrown into turmoil.15
In its wake, Congress undertook the most significant rewriting of the nation's financial laws in generations. The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, passed in 2010 and signed by President Obama, made wholesale changes to the federal framework for consumer financial protection.16 This included the creation of the CFPB, concentrating the formerly diffuse regulation of consumer finance in one agency,17 and also creating a new body of law, the Consumer Financial Protection Act.18 Congress intentionally gave the CFPB powerful and, crucially, flexible tools to address the problems confronting Americans in their financial lives.19 We are entrusted with administering the Consumer Financial Protection Act and eighteen other federal statutes and their implementing regulations - both laws and rules that existed before the financial crisis and new ones that Congress created based on the lessons learned.20 We update, build upon, and defend those rules, examine companies to ensure they follow them, and bring enforcement actions in court to hold people and corporations accountable when they don't.
Fast forward to today.
The marketplace for consumer financial products and services has evolved markedly since the days when subprime mortgages and foreclosure statistics led the nightly news.21 Yet Americans are still facing real challenges, risks, and harm in their financial lives, with often devastating consequences for working people. To give the most obvious example, the technology industry has come crashing into consumer finance.22 Anyone who has paid for groceries with their phone knows that the world has changed. And that vastly understates the impact that the rise of the digital economy has had on people's financial lives. The issue dominating the day is no longer subprime mortgages, but there is no shortage of exploding financial products. Technology platforms and other large players have leveraged and abused their centrality in the economy.23 Data is now harvested, bought, and sold every time someone pays for something.24 Firms across the economy rely on detailed and invasive datasets to power algorithmic decision-making that too often exacerbates existing disparities and distress.25 Fraud runs rampant on platforms that facilitate "peer-to-peer" money transfers.26 And rapid changes in the labor market have affected everything from the surveillance of people at work27 to how they get paid.28
Yet, before Director Chopra took the helm, the CFPB had done very little to think about or confront the changes in the consumer financial marketplace. The CFPB had taken virtually no action in response to Big Tech's stampede into the consumer financial marketplace, let alone address the broader challenges of the economy's digital transformation.
That is no longer the case.
Congress created the CFPB "to reduce the chance that another generation will have to go through a crisis of similar magnitude."29 A key aspect of that reform was creating powerful, generalized tools for the agency to use to prevent consumer harm.30 As the Senate report for the Dodd-Frank Act said: "The CFPB will have enough flexibility to address future problems as they arise. Creating an agency that only had the authority to address the problems of the past, such as mortgages, would be too short-sighted. Experience has shown that consumer protections must adapt to new practices and new industries."31
Beyond the legislative history, this can be clearly seen in countless examples in the text of the many laws passed from 1968 to 2010 that the CFPB is responsible for implementing and enforcing. Title Fifteen of the U.S. Code is filled with flexible language32 that is intended to be durable, designed by Congress to apply to practices in the market as they evolve.33 To give a central example, the Consumer Financial Protection Act prohibits financial institutions from engaging in unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts or practices.34 This authority builds on a Federal Trade Commission Act provision from nearly a hundred years ago that is general enough to adapt to changing circumstances.35 As the legislative history of the FTC Act says, and as the Supreme Court has acknowledged,36 "there were too many unfair practices to define, and after writing 20 of them into the law, it would be quite possible to invent others."37 The same is true for many of the other federal consumer financial protection laws.38
Under the law, then, if the CFPB is not addressing emerging risks and harm to consumers, we are not doing our job. You simply cannot enforce the federal consumer financial laws without understanding the larger changes in the economy, many of them driven by new technology. As General Counsel of the CFPB, my role has been to make certain that the lawyers and the agency as a whole are always interrogating whether we are complying with the words and intent of Congress - that the agency not just respond to the last crisis, but take action to prevent the next one.39 This has meant a drive across the CFPB to use every tool that Congress entrusted us with - enforcement, supervision, regulations, guidance documents, amicus briefs, market monitoring, resolving complaints from individual consumers, and more - to address new risks as well as old ones.
The CFPB has taken action to supervise Big Tech and providers of other widely used digital payment apps.40 But that is just the beginning. The CFPB has made clear that, in the modern consumer protection framework that Congress envisioned, states are full partners with the federal government, rather than adversaries, in identifying and addressing harmful, cutting-edge practices.41 We have used our authority to monitor markets for emerging risks, including in the payment system, where there has been an explosion in financial companies racing to capture and monetize data as a new path to profits.42 We have shined a light on how rules imposed by mobile operating systems like Apple and Google can have a significant impact on innovation, consumer choice, and the growth of open and decentralized banking and payments.43 We have focused on how Congress anticipated that marketing and advertising practices from financial institutions and their service providers could harm consumers.44
And across many markets, we have explained how existing law has continued relevance to new and evolving practices. For example, the CFPB has noted that the law stops financial firms from engaging in shady kickback arrangements, whether they were inked across a table in a conference room or through an online comparison tool.45 We have made clear that there is not, and has never been, a "technology exception" to our nation's fair lending laws.46 The federal consumer financial laws apply in the massive online economies where people use real money to buy fake money, and to the words spat out by "chatbots" that have increasingly replaced human customer service representatives.47 The CFPB has explained that targeting consumers who are least able to protect themselves is unlawful in any consumer financial market, not just the mortgage market that prompted the 2008 crisis,48 and that the Truth in Lending Act applies to "Buy Now, Pay Later" practices that have expanded rapidly in the last few years.49 And we have articulated how the consumer reporting laws provide much-needed transparency for workers regarding the black box algorithms that increasingly dictate every aspect of their working lives.50
The CFPB has also applied the prohibition on unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts or practices to the many ways that people are being deceived, ripped off, or otherwise taken advantage of today. With the New York Attorney General's office, the CFPB sued a major subprime auto lender that abusively manipulated the prices of vehicles based on how borrowers were projected to perform in an algorithmic model.51 We brought actions against companies that trick and trap people into paying fees using digital "dark patterns" and other forms of sophisticated user interface design.52 The CFPB sued a company that abused its market dominance to charge consumers unavoidable fees for prepaid cards used to return money to consumers.53 And as so much financial activity moves online to marketplaces and other platforms, we have made clear that manipulating reviews to trick or confuse consumers can be unfair.54
The CFPB has been thinking about how people's lives have changed in the past decade, how that makes them susceptible to illegal practices, and, crucially, how we need to apply our laws and authorities in light of that evolution - in short, exactly what Congress instructed us to do.
The same applies to many other laws that protect consumers, workers, and people as they go about their day. I know it's fashionable to criticize Washington, DC, and some of those critiques have merit. But DC is, in fact, where our elected representatives come together to reach compromise on our nation's laws. And the reality is that hundreds of representatives and their hard-working staffs are not obtuse. Members of Congress do not intend to pass laws that will be irrelevant the moment that the ink dries.55
Yet for the last four years, this bedrock proposition - that most laws are written to be durable, and relevant in people's lives - has been relentlessly attacked. In the case of the CFPB, we are talking about laws like the Dodd-Frank Act and the Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility, and Disclosure (CARD) Act, which were passed by the 2009-2010 Congress and signed by President Obama.56 It is abundantly obvious that these lawmakers, of all people - keenly aware of the existing framework's failure to prevent the last catastrophe - drafted these laws to address evolving problems. The core provisions of these statutes have not been amended in any meaningful way by Congress - which means that, under the principles of our Constitutional system, their words are still the law.57 Yet too many efforts simply to apply the law to modern circumstances have been blocked in courts - outside of the democratic process - as part of a larger ideological crusade.
Take the judge-made legal doctrine known as "major questions." Rooted in a few statutory interpretation opinions from prior decades, the doctrine has now been weaponized to disempower Congress from writing statutes with enduring relevance.58 The Supreme Court began to routinely invoke this doctrine a few years ago, to much criticism from the bar and legal academia.59 And now the doctrine has metastasized through the lower courts as a basis to strike down any government action that can be characterized (or mischaracterized) as "new" and "major" - even where the agency is simply applying the text and intent of the law to the world as it exists today.60
For example, in 2022, the CFPB's Office of Supervision updated its "examination manual"61 to include the common sense notion that racial, religious, or other insidious forms of discrimination could, depending on the circumstances, violate the Consumer Financial Protection Act's prohibition on unfairness.62 In other words, we said that discrimination can be unfair. There is a history of agencies making similar claims,63 and especially in an age of algorithmic bias and concern over fair access to the banking system, this hardly seemed to us like a major "question of vast economic or political significance."64
Moreover, the 2010 Congress didn't write anything into the text of the statute that suggests that discrimination is not unfair. As a textual matter, a discriminatory act or practice could certainly satisfy the statutory standard for unfairness.65 And, of course, there is no carve-out in the law's text for discrimination.66
Yet when the big banks sued us - in Texas - a district judge ruled that discrimination is actually not unfair.67 The judge wrote an exception into the law, relying on the major questions doctrine to override the United States Congress and the 237 Representatives and 60 Senators who voted for the unfairness provision.68 Apparently, there are actually secret words in the statute - written in invisible ink that only corporate lawyers and certain judges can see. The case is, as they say, now on appeal.69
Unfortunately, that case is not an outlier. In lower courts across the country, judges have repeatedly struck down agency action under statutes that Congress clearly drafted to apply to evolving circumstances simply because the agency was doing just that.70 As Justice Kagan has put it, after decades of lectures about the need to be "textualist," the major questions doctrine is now being used as a "get-out-of-text-free card."71
More importantly, the major questions doctrine is just one tactic used to twist or altogether rewrite the law to protect the powerful from any government action.72 We have repeatedly seen judicial decisions overturn the clear consensus that our elected representatives from across the country reached in Washington. The CFPB had a federal judge rule that the Equal Credit Opportunity Act only allows the agency to address discrimination after someone submits a loan application - meaning that Congress gave the agency no power to prohibit "whites only" or "women need not apply" signs.73 Fortunately, the appeals court overturned that one.74
After more than three years on the front lines, I have no qualms about saying that nearly any question, no matter how small, can now be "major," and there is virtually no mousehole that can't hide an elephant.75
I do not want to give the impression that we have not had many successes in protecting people from very real harm. Far from it. Industry may think they have an ace-in-the-hole with well-funded forum-shopping litigation, but the CFPB has tenaciously stuck to its mission of protecting the American people. In enforcement action after enforcement action, the CFPB has held the largest financial institutions accountable,76 driven individual accountability as well,77 and tried to ensure that repeat offenders do not see fines and penalties as a cost of doing business.78 We have also been ambitious about what visionary supervision can accomplish, addressing issues like bias in algorithmic lending79 and exotic contract clauses that deny people their rights,80 and driving hundreds of millions of dollars in illegal junk fees back to consumers.81
I am proud of how much the CFPB has accomplished for working people. But the undemocratic campaign against applying the law to the world as it is today is a real obstacle to addressing the tremendous changes happening across the economy - with even more on the horizon - that are causing financial pain for so many.
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As part of ensuring that our implementation of the federal consumer financial laws keeps up with the world as it evolves, the CFPB has also revisited existing applications of the law to make sure they still make sense. This is really very simple: if the world changes but interpretations of the law do not, then the law is not being applied appropriately to the facts as they exist now. So in the last few years, the CFPB has closely examined the laws and regulations that we administer, many of which we inherited from other agencies, including how those documents have been interpreted by courts and deployed by litigants and others at the state and federal level.
One of the things the CFPB has done is to examine all the laws and regulations under our authority to make sure we are complying with Congress's mandates. We have instructed our lawyers to inspect every line of those laws and rules - literally page by page. We found that there are important provisions extremely relevant to the world as it exists now that had never been addressed by the agency. I should note that the CFPB is hardly unique in this regard. Too often federal agencies let their authorities languish, or worse treat them as polite suggestions from the legislative branch.82 Then inertia builds up, and, ironically, the very agency that failed to implement the statute succumbs to the idea that, because the provision was not treated as consequential before, it is controversial or even legally dubious to rely on it now.83 Yet if Congress wrote a statutory provision that applies to something happening right now, we should not make excuses for failing to apply the law that way. And so part of our job as agency lawyers is to know each and every legal provision and ensure that they are being applied appropriately.
We have taken this task seriously. You can see this in the CFPB's advisory opinion highlighting a critical, but essentially ignored, provision ensuring that people have access to basic information from their bank without roadblocks or fees.84 The CFPB also, for the first time, made use of statutory authority to supervise financial institutions that present risks to consumers.85 This is crucially important to ensure that - unlike the regulatory agencies in the lead-up to the financial crisis - we do not have any blind spots in the oversight of financial markets.86 We also wrote regulations making the first use of authority to register nonbank participants in consumer financial markets to ensure better transparency about repeat violators of the law,87 and finalized long-languishing rules regarding small business lending transparency88 and people's rights regarding their financial data.89
Being faithful to the law also means reviewing existing regulations and other interpretations to ensure they are still, as the world evolves, consistent with the statute that Congress passed. Many agencies sit back and see how the law develops over years or decades - or worse, treat the process as "one and done." But as the agency charged with administering the federal consumer financial laws, we have been aware that courts may be pulled by eager litigants away from the text of statutes and regulations. So it is our job to monitor litigation to see where parties have tried to twist the law or create loopholes that do not exist, and to file amicus briefs to ensure the law is correctly interpreted.90 We countered a false premise - with no basis whatsoever in the statute - that people aren't entitled to accountability for mistakes on their credit report that can be characterized as "legal" in nature;91 we vindicated the idea that our nation's fair lending laws protect existing customers from discrimination;92 and we defeated efforts to bless unauthorized and illegal junk fees for people simply making payments on their mortgage or finding how much they owe to pay it off.93
Another area of focus - especially given the dismal role of federal regulators in the lead-up to the 2008 crisis, which Congress expressly reproached in Dodd-Frank94 - has been to ensure that the laws we administer aren't inappropriately used to block, or "preempt," states from protecting consumers from harmful practices.95 The CFPB made clear that states and localities have the ability to limit dubious data on their resident's credit reports, including information about medical or rental debt that is often riddled with errors and has little predictive value.96 We responded to an industry request to cut back state laws providing crucial disclosures about small business lending by issuing a determination that, no, there is not a conflict between laws that protect consumers and laws that protect small businesses.97 And we supported the Solicitor General's position - contrary to the view that the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency had expressed98 - against a sweeping preemption standard that Congress explicitly rejected.99 The Solicitor General's position was ultimately adopted by the Supreme Court, 9-0.100
Ensuring the relevance of our regulations has also entailed taking on some of industry's sacred cows. We often hear about the need to delete old rules. And if existing regulations do not make sense in the modern world, they should be reformed. But that should not be a one-way rachet. If administrative law means anything, then the safe harbors, carve-outs, and liability shields that well-paid industry lobbyists and lawyers fought to create must be treated with the same level of scrutiny as provisions that protect consumers. And the CFPB is responsible for reams of regulations promulgated by other agencies in earlier eras101 - both with respect to the factual circumstances of how financial markets work and also with respect to what the courts, as a matter of administrative law, have found it appropriate for a federal agency to do.
Much of the CFPB's recent regulatory agenda has focused on ensuring that these existing regulations are consistent with the laws that Congress actually wrote. In the credit card market, the CFPB updated a decade-old regulation implementing a statutory provision of the 2009 CARD Act.102 This provision on its face should protect people from predatory credit card fee practices.103 Yet with scant justification, the Federal Reserve Board, shortly before the CFPB was created, issued an industry-friendly "safe harbor"104 that is now nothing more than a $14 billion a year boondoggle borne by the worst-off borrowers.105 The CFPB also recently finalized a regulation on overdraft fees updating a 55-year-old carve-out from the Truth in Lending Act.106 This revision reflects that the dominance of checks - the circumstances underlying the old rule - has long passed, and would ensure competition among similar credit products by applying statutory protections consistently under the law.107 These reforms are similar in that both would help consumers by cutting back outdated safe harbors that the largest financial institutions in the world have relied on to shield themselves from market forces and charge consumers hundreds of billions of dollars in junk fees.108
Not surprisingly, our efforts have been relentlessly challenged by trade associations, revolving-door lawyers, and their allies who file in favored venues where they think the outcomes are preordained while rhapsodizing like they are the second coming of Clarence Darrow.109 Why do they do it? Because time and time again, it works. The CFPB's credit card late fee rule explained in painstaking detail that Congress intended such fees to be "reasonable and proportional" and expressly provided the agency with rulemaking authority to establish standards implementing this provision.110 The CFPB relied on extensive research to find that, "[a] decade on from the [Federal Reserve] Board's implementation" of that provision, "the more robust data now available indicate that the late fee amounts charged by larger card issuers have again ballooned out of proportion" - "exactly the situation Congress intended to avert with the CARD Act."111 Yet trade groups got the rule blocked by convincing a Texas district court that, actually, the 2009 Congress and President Obama required the agency to allow banks to punish consumers with punitive fees.112 Our overdraft rule has also been challenged - in a lawsuit filed the very day that we issued the regulation - because industry evidently believes it is illegal for an agency ever to narrow an exemption that makes them a lot of money.113
Administrative law has become a sword to strike down any attempt to reign in corporate abuse as well as a shield to protect the loopholes and safe harbors that allow the well-off and well-connected to capitalize on rules and regulations rigged in their favor.
One significant question we should be asking is whether the law's hostility to agencies and their expertise will be applied fairly. Has the dog caught the car? The Federal Register is littered with billion-dollar industry boondoggles, promulgated over generations with little or even no justification, backed by administrative records long lost in a far-off warehouse. When these provisions are challenged, how will purportedly neutral legal principles be applied - when the outcome would favor consumers, and workers, and those without power? Will industry sacred cows be held to the same exacting standards?
If that sounds naïve - if, of course, consumers and people will not receive the same protections from "government overreach" as corporations and industry - then I think we need to recognize that administrative law is just another place where we have one legal system for the powerful, and another for everybody else.
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After hundreds of days of being the CFPB General Counsel, I could make a list a mile long of "takeaways." But tying these lessons together is a larger theme: how the law and our legal system today is undermining our democracy. We must not overlook the debilitating effect that the legal system - whose only guiding principle too often seems to be power and protecting those with it - is having on real people's lives, and our democracy itself.
Over the past few years, legal challenges killed or left languishing countless efforts across the federal government to provide meaningful improvement to the household finances and economic stability of hundreds of millions of Americans. That list includes ensuring the freedom to switch to a different job,114 protecting people from being ripped off by credit card115 and airline junk fees,116 protecting servicemembers and others from unscrupulous practices at the car dealership,117 providing relief for students ripped off by predatory schools,118 ensuring overtime pay for workers,119 lowering student loan payments,120 and ensuring that contract and franchise workers are treated fairly.121 I could go on and on.
These are not obscure issues, or ones only of interest to people in DC, or at think tanks and universities. These are matters that affect most people on most days. And they are issues that are talked about and debated in presidential and Congressional campaigns, that people vote on - implicitly and even explicitly.
Despite that, the American people's voice and vote has grown increasingly irrelevant to the change our government is able to deliver. That's because the actual laws that are passed have grown increasingly irrelevant to the legal system.
Much of our job as government lawyers has become trying to manage the dubious direction that much of the law has taken: venue and standing decisions blessing increasingly audacious forum-shopping;122 nationwide injunctions and vacaturs handed out like candy;123 administrative law that makes anything the government says judicially reviewable;124 and completely undemocratic statutory interpretation.125 The law itself has become broken - and the cumulative effect is making it harder and harder to deliver on the laws that our citizens, through their elected representatives, chose to enact for the benefit of anyone other than the powerful and well connected.
Despite all this, the CFPB still has had significant success. In 2022, the Fifth Circuit ruled that the CFPB's funding mechanism was unconstitutional, calling into question every single CFPB action (not to mention the financing of much of the federal government).126 Yet the CFPB went on to win the case at the Supreme Court, 7-2, in an opinion authored by Justice Thomas.127 In an age where the administrative state has lost case after case for so many years, upholding the CFPB's funding was a seminal victory for the agency's independence as well as for consumers. Just last month, a federal judge in Washington, DC appointed by President Trump flatly rejected a request for an injunction against our advisory opinion restating the widely accepted principle that debt collectors should not demand amounts that people do not actually owe.128 The CFPB prevailed in Texas on a challenge to our regulation to ensure critical transparency in the small business lending market.129 We also successfully defended our authority to enforce the law against Wall Street trusts that bizarrely claimed that, even though they file lawsuits against human beings to collect on loans, they somehow are not "debt collectors.130
But the challenges and setbacks we faced at the CFPB are a frankly frightening window into the larger challenges our country faces now, and will in the future. Although we prevailed at the Supreme Court, unspoken in the Court's opinion was the damage the ordeal did to the government's enforcement and administration of the law, staying over a dozen enforcement actions and giving Wall Street a chance to run out the clock on significant rules that were stayed for more than a year.131 And there have been many more cynical legal actions propped up by some judges. The national banking trade associations joined the Longview Chamber of Commerce to file a lawsuit in Tyler, Texas challenging the update to our examination manual indicating that discrimination could be unfair.132 A federal judge found venue and standing based on a few anonymous affidavits that did not name a single affected financial institution.133 In a case filed about a year later, Synchrony bank, headquartered in Utah, brazenly bought a membership in the Fort Worth Chamber of Commerce to try to establish venue for a challenge to the CFPB's credit card late fee rule in perhaps the only jurisdiction they thought they could win in.134 A Trump-appointed judge tried twice to transfer the case from his courtroom but was mandamus'd each time by the Fifth Circuit and ultimately enjoined the rule.135
That's just the top of our list, and that's just one agency. But in no way are these abuses limited to cases involving the CFPB. The banking regulators were blocked from updating the nation's anti-redlining rules because the definition of "community" was deemed a major question.136 The Department of Education had an injunction granted against it on a proposal they had yet to even finalize.137 The Department of Health and Human Services had a tweet about humans taking horse pills deemed judicially reviewable agency action.138 The FTC rule on non-competes was blocked on the theory that the FTC is prohibited from writing any unfair competition rules.139 The Department of Transportation was blocked from requiring airlines to disclose their fees because to do so would "irreparably harm" the airlines by requiring them to "expend significant resources reengineering their websites."140
In addition to the difficulty of litigating these cases, we government lawyers have also been trying to give sensible legal advice to clients - policymakers, enforcement attorneys - attempting to administer the laws they raised their hands and faithfully swore to execute. The way things are going, it may eventually become hard to tell government officials that anything written in the U.S. Code or F.3d even matters. I worry we may reach a point where policymakers feel that following the law - and their lawyers' advice - is a game for suckers.
In light of all this heads-I-win, tails-you-lose legal nonsense, it is hard to blame the millions upon millions of Americans who have given up on the system, and on legal institutions that increasingly pretend they are predicated on principle. If over the course of a presidential administration, a federal agency is unable to change a regulation based on a raft of new data, or to update a 55-year-old rule rooted in the days when everyone routinely used checks, it may be time to unsparingly and unequivocally state that much of the system is rigged, and many of our institutions are broken.
So we must ask ourselves: what is the fall out? Memo after memo, brief after brief, opinion after opinion, I find myself with the gnawing question: at this moment in time, can our government effectuate national policymaking that tries to help those without power? Far too often, the answer is no.
And that necessarily leads to the next and even more troubling question: given the extent that our legal system is deployed to block the legitimate action of the elected branches, what does that say about the state of our democracy? It is hard not to see this as a coordinated and ruthlessly effective effort to render the voters' and their representatives' decisions meaningless - to try to nullify the decisions actually made in the halls of Congress, not to mention the debate we had in the national campaign four years ago. We often hear complaints that people in only a handful of swing states decide nationwide policy. If only that were the case. It is increasingly apparent that some number of unelected judges have appointed themselves our nation's decisionmakers.141 Those who care about the law have allowed it to get hijacked, and it is no surprise that Americans have the lowest opinion of the judiciary in recent memory.142
And let me say one thing that is often unstated. Does anybody think that if the Biden Administration had just clipped its wings a little, moderated around the edges here or there, that somehow these opinions would be different? Of course not.
So we'll now get yet another test of whether the law is based on principle. Will policy questions affecting millions of people and billions of dollars still be "major" when a different administration makes those decisions?143 Or do doctrines like major questions, standing, venue, and vacatur depend on the political party of the plaintiffs, or whether they are special interests protecting corporate power instead of everyday citizens?
This is not just about what happened these past few years. If future Presidents can't do what they promise because lawyers in robes block them, will that be worth cheering for? If the law instead now bends to suit their will, what does that say about the rule of law? Is the fate of our country - how people are treated as consumers and workers and human beings - going to be decided by national debates and elections, or by a handful of attorneys pushing their own political agenda?
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In closing, we are now at a crossroads. I am proud of the work we have done at the CFPB these last few years, thinking about how the law should be implemented to address the challenges of working people. We pushed the boulder a little bit of the way up the hill. But, clearly, it was not enough. And while I appreciate the temptation to believe that things will get better soon - the darkest moment is before the dawn, and all that - I'm not so sure. Some very smart people are thinking about how we can make a real, noticeable difference in Americans' day-to-day economic lives. I don't think enough people realize how challenging this will be, given the state of the law and the legal system, including where we expect the judiciary to go in the next few years.
We at the CFPB have proudly been part of a broader effort across the government - including herculean work at places like the Federal Trade Commission, National Labor Relations Board, the Department of Justice's Antitrust Division, and the Department of Transportation - to try to end the days when those charged with administering the law not only go along with a system that favors those with money and power, but actively facilitate it.144 As Director Chopra has put it, we have tried to "close[] the chapter of the 40 years . . . where law has really been weaponized to make the powerful people in our society more powerful."145 I am so grateful to have had the opportunity to contribute to that project.
Yet over the past three years, it was hard not to realize - in the face of the massive, multi-million-dollar effort against everything we did - how little cavalry there was. We have some wonderful friends and supporters, but not nearly enough. There are simply not that many lawyers who get to wake up every day thinking about how to use the law to help everyday people. Legal aid attorneys, consumer and worker advocates, government lawyers - these are my heroes. But they are vastly outnumbered by the battalions of attorneys working the system in favor of the powerful.146 There are too many lawyers pushing the boulder further and further back down the hill - the zealots and extremists who weaponize the law in support of their political ideology, and the many more lawyers who enable them.
I began by asking whether the federal government can plan and effectuate meaningful policy, whether the laws that Congress passed to address economic pain and uncertainty can be implemented as our elected representatives intended, and whether our institutions work for working people. We should all be concerned not only about what the answers are today, but about where we will be tomorrow if the law, legal system, and legal profession do not fundamentally change course.
We need to confront the threats brought on by tech giants and a "platform-driven" economy, the attacks on our privacy, the increasing control of big business over workers and consumers alike, and all the ways that people are struggling. Yet we won't be able to have an Economy for All or a Care Agenda or an Abundance Agenda - or any other prescription for a given problem or for the country writ large - if we do not confront the obstacles standing in the way of the government's ability to deliver. All the policy ideas in the world - all the proposed regulations and model bills and campaign promises - won't make a difference if the legal system blocks our democracy.
We are at a crossroads in our country today because nothing is ever going to change if we do not fix what is broken with our institutions. We need real solutions, and we need them now. We need to address the crisis of lawbreaking that is devastating working people. We need real reform of the legal system, to make changes that will last. And we need government lawyers thinking more about the laws that they administer, helping lead their agencies to meet the challenges of the moment, and never being satisfied with how things have always been done.
Let's get to work.