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Forbes
Forbes
9 Feb 2025


The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will not receive its next scheduled tranche of federal funding, new acting director Russell Vought said Saturday night—after reportedly telling agency staffers to stop their work—a dismal sign for the bureau that has been targeted by Trump and tech billionaires including Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk, with Musk advocating for “deleting” the agency in his efforts to cut government spending.

Senate Banking Committee Holds Nomination Hearing For Russell Vought To Be OMB Director

Russell Vought testifies during the Senate Banking Committee nomination hearing in the Dirksen ... [+] Senate Building on January 22 in Washington, DC.

Getty Images

Vought said Saturday he notified the Federal Reserve the CFPB will not receive its next draw of federal funding—claiming it’s “not ‘reasonably necessary’ to carry out [the agency’s] duties”—amid multiple reports indicating Vought emailed agency staff Saturday to say they should halt all of their work.

The move came after CFPB’s X account, formerly available at @CFPB, appeared to be taken offline—telling users “This account doesn’t exist”—while the agency’s website also displays a 404 error.

Vought, an architect of the conservative Project 2025 agenda, reportedly took over the agency Friday as Trump and Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency seek to gut the bureau, their latest target as they try to slash government spending.

Also Friday, Musk’s DOGE staff reportedly accessed the CFPB building and gained access to the bureau’s computer systems, which the CFPB union slammed as “a clear attempt to attack union workers and defang the only agency that checks the greed of payment providers.”

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent ordered agency staff in an email earlier this week to stop all regulatory work and “public communications of any type,” citing the need to ensure operations are consistent with Trump’s executive orders, according to multiple reports.

Reining in the CFPB has long been a target of Republicans and tech executives after the Biden administration implemented new regulations to address predatory lending and credit card and banking fees.

“CFPB RIP ????,” Musk posted on X on Friday afternoon.

“Vought is giving big banks and giant corporations the green light to scam families,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., who originally conceived of the CFPB, tweeted Saturday night in response to reports Vought ordered employees to stop all work. “The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has returned over $21 billion to families cheated by Wall Street. Republicans have failed to gut it in Congress and in the courts. They will fail again.”

The world’s wealthiest person, Elon Musk, has attacked the CFPB, joining a chorus of tech and finance titans who claim the agency has taken a heavy-handed approach to regulation. Musk, who is advising Trump on ways to scale back the size of the federal government, said in November he wanted to “delete CFPB” because “there are too many duplicative regulatory agencies,” shortly after the agency announced a new rule to enhance oversight of big tech companies and others offering digital funds transfers and payment wallet apps.

Billionaires Marc Andreessen and Mark Zuckerberg also lashed out at the agency, which threatened to sue Meta last year over allegations it improperly used financial data in its advertising business. Zuckerberg told Joe Rogan in a podcast interview the CFPB “found some theory they wanted to investigate” and questioning whether there was “a quiet consensus” among regulators that they wanted to punish the tech industry. Andreessen—who has advised some members of the Trump administration—also alleged in an interview with Rogan the agency is “terrorizing anybody who tries to do anything new in financial services.”

Republicans have sought to defund the CFPB and praised Chopra’s termination. Rep. French Hill, R-Ark., vowed Monday in a statement to help Bessent “finally rein in this unaccountable agency by putting the CFPB under the appropriations process, making it a bipartisan commission and providing appropriate statutory guardrails.” The CFPB receives its funding directly from the Federal Reserve, rather than through the congressional appropriations process, a mechanism designed to preserve its impartiality.

The CFPB was formed in 2011, in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. Trump previously sought to limit the CFPB’s authority during his first term, appointing former Rep. Mick Mulvaney, R-S.C., as its acting director. Mulvaney subsequently sent a budget request for the CFPB to the Federal Reserve for $0, ordered a hiring freeze and halted new enforcement actions, according to The New York Times. Former President Joe Biden subsequently hired Chopra to undo the deregulatory actions, and the agency under Chopra’s direction repeatedly clashed with big banks as Chopra spearheaded rules to limit overdraft fees, credit card late fees and eliminate medical debt from credit reports.

Elon Musk Homes In On New Government Target: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (Forbes)