Court Ruling on CFPB Funding is ‘Outrageous,’ Says National Consumer Law Center

WASHINGTON – The National Consumer Law Center is describing a court decision that found the way the CFPB is structured is unconstitutional as being “outrageous.”

As CUToday.info reported here, the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, found the CFPB’s funding structure violates the Constitution because it receives funding through the Federal Reserve, rather than through the Congressional appropriations process.

That, the court stated, is a direct conflict to the Constitution’s checks and balances on government power.

In response, the NCLC said the ruling “endangers efforts to protect American consumers from big banks and predatory actors.” The organization argues that the funding structure was adopted by Congress to “insulate the Bureau from well-monied lobbyists and powerful interests to enable it to protect the American public.”

Agency ‘Emasculated’

“A panel of the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, composed entirely of appointees of President Trump, has voted to emasculate the only federal agency devoted to protecting the American public against malfeasance and violations of the law by predatory lenders, big banks, credit reporting agencies and others,” said Lauren Saunders, associate director of the National Consumer Law Center. “By claiming that the CFPB’s funding structure must be subject to congressional appropriation, industry lobbyists hope to reclaim their power to protect unfair practices and to use congressional donations and back-room deals to perpetuate predatory financial practices that target families across the country.

The court’s ruling also struck down a 2017 rule aimed at protecting consumers from overdraft fees triggered by predatory payday and other small dollar loans, the NCLC noted.

“It is no surprise that the CFPB has been under attack since its creation following the foreclosure crisis, as the CFPB has delivered over $13.5 billion in relief to 175 million people through enforcement actions, has adopted rules to make mortgages and other financial products safer, and has stopped financial companies across the spectrum from engaging in unfair, deceptive and abusive practices,” Sanders continued. ““Notably, the court found that the CFPB acted legally in adopting the rule that prevents payday lenders from subjecting people to cascading nonsufficient funds and overdraft fees when post-dated checks for predatory, unaffordable loans are repeatedly re-deposited after they bounce.

Jeopardizes Ability to Stand Up to ‘Predators’

“But the court struck down the rule because – like everything the CFPB does – the funding for the CFPB’s work came from the funding stream Congress authorized to keep the CFPB independent and enable it to do its job of protecting consumers. This decision jeopardizes the CFPB’s ability to stand up to financial predators and stop unfair practices, hidden fees, and other abuses in credit reports, credit cards,  mortgages, and student loans.

“I expect the CFPB to appeal this decision to the full en banc panel of Fifth Circuit judges, and the case will ultimately end up before the U.S. Supreme Court,” Sanders said. “The attacks on the CFPB’s funding are without merit, and the Fifth Circuit’s decision is contrary to those of the other courts that have considered the constitutionality of the CFPB’s funding structure. Responsible banks and financial players, like consumers, benefit from the CFPB’s work to level the playing field, and the decision must be reversed.”

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Section: Standard
Word Count: 849
Copyright Holder: CUToday.info
Copyright Year: 2026
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URL: https://cuto-admin.flux5.ccplatform.net/Fresh-Today/Court-Ruling-on-CFPB-Funding-is-Outrageous-Says-National-Consumer-Law-Center