Current:Home > NewsSupreme Court backs Biden on CFPB funding suit, avoiding warnings of housing 'chaos' -Blueprint Wealth Network
Supreme Court backs Biden on CFPB funding suit, avoiding warnings of housing 'chaos'
View
Date:2025-04-19 13:57:27
WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court on Thursday batted away a challenge to how the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is funded, keeping the Obama-era agency in place and sustaining a regulation from 2017 that cracked down on payday lenders.
Instead of subjecting the bureau to annual budget fights on Capitol Hill like most of the government, the CFPB is funded through the Federal Reserve − an effort to shield it from political pressure. Critics said the arrangement violated the Constitution and the principle that Congress alone wields the power of the purse.
The 7-2 decision was a victory for the Biden administration which had asked the court to overturn a conservative appeals court decision invalidating the funding mechanism.
Writing for the majority, Justice Clarence Thomas said funding doesn’t have to come through the congressional appropriation process. An appropriation, he wrote, “is simply a law that authorizes expenditures from a specified source of public money for designated purposes.”
“The statute that provides the Bureau’s funding meets these requirements,” he wrote.
Prep for the polls: See who is running for president and compare where they stand on key issues in our Voter Guide
More:MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, a Trump ally, has his phone seizure case rejected by Supreme Court
In a dissent joined by Justice Neil Gorsuch, Justice Samuel Alito said the majority’s interpretation allows for laws that would let an agency “draw as much money as it wants from any identified source for any permissible purpose until the end of time.”
"It's not an exaggeration to say that the CFPB's enjoys a degree of financial autonomy that a Stuart king would envy," Alito wrote.
Biden: `win for American consumers'
President Joe Biden called the decision an “unmistakable win for American consumers” in protecting a bureau that he said has saved billions for Americans on credit card late fees, overdraft charges and other “junk fees.”
“In the face of years of attacks from extreme Republicans and special interests, the Court made clear that the CFPB’s funding authority is constitutional and that its strong record of consumer protection will not be undone,” Biden said in a statement.
While the case involved a technical matter about the agency’s funding, the implications were potentially vast. A ruling against the agency could have called into question virtually every regulation it has approved affecting auto loans, mortgages and even credit cards. The Mortgage Bankers Association warned that a broad ruling from the high court could have sent the housing market "into chaos, to the detriment of all mortgage borrowers."
The justices appeared to be sensitive to those concerns during oral arguments in October. Even some of the court’s most stalwart conservatives, who have sought to limit the power of federal agencies in other cases, appeared skeptical of the industry’s challenge.
CFPB enforces lending rules
Congress created the bureau in 2010 in part to enforce lending regulations. The agency is funded by the Federal Reserve, which gets its money from banking fees and other sources.
At the center of the case was a payday lending rule the bureau issued in 2017. The rule bars lenders from withdrawing payments from borrowers' bank accounts after two failed attempts. The extra withdrawal attempts, the agency said, would likely not help lenders recoup any money but instead saddle borrowers with overdraft fees. Payday lending groups sued over the agency's funding method.
Before the case reached the Supreme Court, a three-judge panel of the Louisiana-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit ruled that the agency acted within its power to create the regulation. But the appeals court ruled that the way Congress set up the agency’s funding violated the constitutional principle that only Congress has the power to initiate spending.
The Center for Responsible Lending said the Supreme Court's reversal of the appeals court's decision will enable the federal watchdog agency to continue protecting “American’s wallets from predatory financial firms.”
“The Supreme Court’s ruling provided a welcome dose of common sense as it rejected an unprecedented, reckless argument that could have destabilized a housing market that undergirds our economy and invited challenges to funding for most of the federal government, including Medicare and the Federal Reserve,” said Nadine Chabrier, senior policy and litigation counsel at the Center for Responsible Lending.
The case, which was argued in October on the first day of the current term, is Consumer Financial Protection Bureau v. Community Financial Services Association of America.
veryGood! (943)
Related
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Cody Rigsby Offers Advice For a Stress-Free Holiday, “It’s Not That Deep, Boo”
- Larry Fink, photographer who contrasted social classes, dead at 82
- Her daughter, 15, desperately needed a transplant. So a determined mom donated her kidney.
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Geological hazards lurking below Yellowstone National Park, data show
- Ex-WWE Hall of Famer Tammy 'Sunny' Sytch sentenced to 17 years for deadly car crash
- Julia Roberts Honors Twins Phinneas and Hazel in Heartwarming 19th Birthday Tribute
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Israeli hostage returned to family is the same but not the same, her niece says
Ranking
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Israel compares Hamas to the Islamic State group. But the comparison misses the mark in key ways
- Meet 'Samba': The vape-sniffing K9 dog in Florida schools used to crack down on vaping
- Kenya court strikes out key clauses of a finance law as economic woes deepen from rising public debt
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- It's peak shopping — and shoplifting — season. Cops are stepping up antitheft tactics
- What freshman guard D.J. Wagner's injury means for Kentucky basketball's backcourt
- Beware of these 4 scams while hunting for Travel Tuesday deals
Recommendation
House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
Ex-WWE Hall of Famer Tammy 'Sunny' Sytch sentenced to 17 years for deadly car crash
4 news photographers shot in southern Mexico, a case authorities consider attempted murder
Mediators look to extend truce in Gaza on its final day, with one more hostage swap planned
Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
Child dies in fall from apartment building in downtown Kansas City, Missouri
Florida elections security chief lay dead for 24 minutes without help outside Gov. DeSantis' office
An Aaron Rodgers return this season would only hurt the Jets