US Supreme Court justices suggested they aren’t likely to declare the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s funding system unconstitutional, hearing arguments in a case that had threatened to upend years of agency work.
Even some of the court’s conservative justices indicated Tuesday they are inclined to back the agency, set up after the 2008 financial crisis to regulate mortgages, auto loans, credit cards and other consumer-finance products. Congress let the bureau draw as much money as it needs – up to a cap it has never hit – from the
“I get your point that this is different, that it’s unique, that it’s odd, that they’ve never gone this far,” Justice
Although the high court case centers on a never-enforced payday-lending rule, the impact is potentially far broader. The Biden administration says the ruling from the 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals cast a legal cloud over every action the agency has taken since its creation, providing an argument for re-opening even long-finalized rules and enforcement cases.
The 5th Circuit said the bureau was set up in violation of the constitutional provision that requires a congressional appropriation for government spending.
The clash will shape the future of an agency that critics see as the ultimate symbol of an unaccountable and overreaching federal bureaucracy – but that backers say has provided crucial safeguards and an independent check against corporate power.
Skeptical Justices
“Congress has not determined the amount that this agency should be spending,” said Francisco, who served as solicitor general under former President
In fiscal 2022, the agency received $641.5 million in funding, short of its $734 million cap.
The current solicitor general,
Justices from across the ideological spectrum suggested they agreed with those arguments. “You’re just flying in the face of 250 years of history,” Justice
Justice
Problem Fixed
Justice
The Supreme Court in 2020
Kavanaugh suggested that ruling, Seila Law v. CFPB, had resolved the most glaring constitutional problem with the bureau.
“I certainly agree that as originally constructed the CFPB had, in my view, a massive constitutional flaw in the single director who was protected by for-clause removal, but that of course was fixed and addressed in Seila Law, and now it’s not independent at all,” Kavanaugh said. “It’s under the direct supervision and control of the president.”
The case is Consumer Financial Protection Bureau v. Community Financial Services Association, 22-448.
(Update with comments from lawyers, justices starting in fifth paragraph.)
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