ADVERTISEMENT

Trump’s Pick to Lead CFPB Wins Senate Approval

Trump’s Pick to Lead CFPB Wins Senate Approval

(Bloomberg) -- Nearly two years into his administration, President Donald Trump will finally have his own permanent nominee running the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a controversial agency that Republicans say has stifled economic growth by burdening banks with red tape.

The Senate voted 50-to-49 Thursday to confirm Kathy Kraninger, a little-known Office and Management Budget official, as the consumer watchdog’s permanent director. She will succeed her boss, White House Budget Director Mick Mulvaney, who has been leading the CFPB part-time for more than a year.

No Democrats voted in favor of Kraninger’s confirmation.

Kraninger will take over an agency created by the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act that regulates everything from credit cards to mortgages. The CFPB has been a political football throughout its existence, with Democrats regularly praising it as the crown jewel of post-crisis reforms and Republicans arguing that it’s a stark example of government overreach.

As director, Kraninger is widely expected to follow Mulvaney’s lead in softening the CFPB’s bite by re-examining rules and pursuing fewer enforcement actions than it did during Barack Obama’s presidency. Still, she may work more quietly than Mulvaney, who has seemed to relish bickering with the CFPB’s defenders, including Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren.

Kraninger is likely to face tougher congressional oversight than Mulvaney did. That’s because Democrats will take control of the House in January. Representative Maxine Waters, the California lawmaker in line to lead the House Financial Services Committee, has pledged to hold the CFPB’s Trump-appointed leadership accountable for efforts to weaken the agency.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jesse Westbrook in Washington at jwestbrook1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jesse Westbrook at jwestbrook1@bloomberg.net, Gregory Mott

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.