The CFPB has returned more than $17 billion to Americans — and dozens of its workers were laid off on Tuesday night. Earlier this month, an X user posed a simple question to Elon Musk after the Donald Trump-appointed government slasher threatened the existence of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Musk had just posted "CFPB RIP," seemingly an indication that the bureau was on the billionaire’s hit list.
![[Protesters rally in Washington, DC against efforts by Elon Musk and DOGE to shutter federal agencies and force federal employees out of work]](https://static.independent.co.uk/2025/02/11/20/TRUMP-DOGE_42957.jpg)
"I'm genuinely curious @elonmusk," Scott wrote. "I've used the CFPB after my bank was giving me the run around and I had a bunch of fraud charges that they wouldn't refund me, after telling me they found them as fraudulent. Within a week I had my money back. So explain to me how this doesn't benefit us as American citizens?". The CFPB was established in 2011 under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. Initially conceived by then-law professor Elizabeth Warren in 2007, former President Barack Obama ran with the idea and implemented into reforms put into place following the financial crisis of 2007-2008. The agency is an independent office within the Federal Reserve and funded by it.
![[Elon Musk at the inauguration ceremony for Donald Trump's second presidential term]](https://static.independent.co.uk/2025/02/11/3/59/Elon-Musk.jpeg)
The crisis and the subsequent Great Recession that fueled massive unemployment and saw millions of Americans facing home foreclosures was caused in part by predatory lending practices by banks offering subprime loans to borrowers who couldn't secure financing through more traditional means. The CFPB was established to act as a regulatory watchdog and enforcement arm to prevent these practices. The agency both fined institutions that either took advantage of consumers or failed to deliver on services or protections they promised customers and advocated for more consumer-friendly banking and lending practices, like capping overdraft fees and credit card interest rates.
In addition to the money its won back for consumers, the agency also acted as a source of information, providing more than 63 million users with answers to financial questions and collecting more than 6.8 million complaints by consumers who felt wronged by companies. Those complaints were then sent to the companies in question, but with the heft of the federal government behind them. That's the heart of Scott G's question; why kill the agency tasked with protecting American consumers?.
The fight against the existence of the CFPB is not new; banking and lending institutions have been opposed to it from the start, and their allies in the Republican Party has echoed their opposition in the years since. Banks and lenders have sued the CFPB, alleging it regularly overreaches in its regulatory actions. For example; by reclassifying overdraft protections as credit products, some banking analysts have argued that the agency's actions will raise the cost of other banking services and potentially deprive customers of access to credit in the form of overdrafting for necessary purchases.
“The reality is that [capping late fees] will also increase the likelihood that banks raise other types of fees to make up for the lost revenue,” Matt Schulz, chief credit analyst at financial products comparison site LendingTree, told USA Today. On Monday, Trump attacked both the agency and its brainchild, Senator Warren, complaining that the agency was "set up to destroy people" and that the senator "used that as her little personal agency to go around and destroy people.".
Musk having a direct hand in dismantling an agency that might regulate him seems as though it would be a conflict of interest, and federal law prevents special government employees — including Musk — from working on projects in which they have direct financial interests. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt assured reporters who questioned her about Musk's conflict of interests that he would determine whether or not he was facing a conflict and would recuse himself if he felt it appropriate.
“If Elon Musk comes across a conflict of interest with the contracts and the funding that DOGE is overseeing, then Elon will excuse himself from those contracts,” she said. “And he has, again, abided by all applicable laws.”. Work at the agency is frozen per Vought's orders, and top officials are already abandoning ship. On Tuesday, two top officials at the CFPB resigned after they were placed on administrative leave. Assistant Director for the Office of Enforcement Eric Halperin and Assistant Director for Supervision Policy, Lorelei Salas, have both exited the agency.
Warren warned that without the agency, corporations will know there is no regulatory arm with the teeth to keep huge banks and financial institutions in line. “If you keep the laws the same on the books, but you fire the cops, you’re going to have a lot more crime,” Warren told the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday. “The cops, at least right at this moment, have been told at the CFPB to stand down. And I appreciate that we have state AGs who step in and often they partner up with the CFPB, but there is no one else for the giant banks who actually does what’s called bank examination [for consumer protection laws].”.