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WASHINGTON: The Senate narrowly approved President Biden’s pick to run the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on Thursday, giving the bureau a director who is likely to embrace an aggressive watchdog role, similar to how the agency operated under former President Obama.
Rohit Chopra’s nomination was approved 50-48, with Vice President Kamala Harris earlier having to cast a tie-breaking vote to end debate. Republicans were united in opposition against Chopra.
Before his approval, Chopra held one of the Democrat seats on the Federal Trade Commission, often using his position to publicly advocate for higher penalties and enforcement against companies were found to have committed wrongdoing. A then GOP-controlled Senate unanimously confirmed Chopra to his FTC commissioner job in 2018, a point Democrats made during debates about his nomination when it became clear no Republican would vote to approve him this time.
Chopra, 39, also held several high-ranking positions at the CFPB during the Obama administration as well, including the top job handling student loan issues.
Chopra has a long history of protecting consumers, said Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, who is the chairman of the Senate Banking Committee.
Chopra is the CFPB’s third permanent director since the bureau was created by the Dodd-Frank Act, the law passed after the 2008 financial crisis that overhauled the entire banking and financial system. Kathy Kraninger, who was former President Donald Trump’s choice to run the bureau, was asked to resign by President Joe Biden on his first day in office.
During the Trump administration, the CFPB drastically scaled back its enforcement actions, both in number and size, and it relegated concerns, such as fair lending, to a much smaller position inside the bureau. It was a stark contrast to how the bureau was run under the Obama administration, where it aggressively collected fines from banks and credit card companies and returned billions of dollars in damages to borrowers.
President Biden’s choice for the CFPB’s acting director, Dave Uejio, has used his position to pivot the bureau sharply back to its original mission.
Republicans have long held an ideological opposition to the CFPB, due to its structure with a single director and because it is funded through the Federal Reserve instead of the traditional Congressional appropriations process. That criticism abated somewhat when Kraninger ran the bureau due to her more business-friendly approach.
“I have grave concerns that Commissioner Chopra would return the CFPB to the lawless, overreaching, highly politicized agency it was during the Obama administration,” said Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania, the ranking Republican on the Senate Banking Committee, during his speech opposing the nomination.
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