Russell Vought Reshapes CFPB With Major Staffing Cuts and Litigation Pivot episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 28, 2026 · 3 MIN

Russell Vought Reshapes CFPB With Major Staffing Cuts and Litigation Pivot

from Director of the Office of Management and Budget - 101 · host Inception Point AI

Russell Vought, the Director of the Office of Management and Budget and Acting Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, continues to drive significant restructuring across multiple federal agencies as part of the Trump administration's broader cost-cutting agenda. Recent developments show Vought's office pursuing aggressive changes to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. According to reporting from the American Banker and ABA Banking Journal, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency terminated the CFPB's lease for its Washington headquarters in February 2026, approximately six years early, transferring the property to the General Services Administration at no cost. This physical downsizing aligns with Vought's stated desire to substantially shrink the bureau that was created by Congress in 2010 following the financial crisis. The administration is simultaneously pursuing workforce reductions at the CFPB. Government lawyers have proposed cutting the bureau's staff by more than half, from roughly 1,100 employees to about 550. This comes after the Trump administration inherited a bureau with more than 1,750 employees at the start of the second term. The National Treasury Employees Union has challenged this reduction in force, and a court-ordered stay currently prevents large-scale terminations from moving forward. The administration withdrew an earlier proposal that could have eliminated up to 90 percent of staff. Under Vought's leadership, the CFPB appears to be repositioning toward increased litigation. Enforcement attorneys have been offered opportunities to transfer into the litigation unit, even as the enforcement division faces some of the largest proposed cuts. According to the American Banker, this strategic pivot suggests a CFPB with narrower focus, less emphasis on front-line enforcement, and greater attention to defending its rules and restructuring decisions in court. On the small business lending front, the CFPB submitted a final rule to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs on April 17, 2026, completing its overhaul of small-business lender data collection requirements originally issued during the Biden administration. This Section 1071 rulemaking has been a centerpiece of the CFPB's deregulatory agenda under Vought's direction. Beyond the CFPB, Vought's budget office has frozen research funding across federal agencies and proposed a 10 percent cut to non-defense spending for Fiscal Year 2027. The budget eliminates the Minority Business Development Agency entirely while increasing funding for national security initiatives and innovation protection efforts. Thank you for tuning in to this briefing on federal spending and regulatory changes. Be sure to subscribe for more updates on government policy and budget developments. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

Russell Vought, the Director of the Office of Management and Budget and Acting Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, continues to drive significant restructuring across multiple federal agencies as part of the Trump administration's broader cost-cutting agenda. Recent developments show Vought's office pursuing aggressive changes to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. According to reporting from the American Banker and ABA Banking Journal, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency terminated the CFPB's lease for its Washington headquarters in February 2026, approximately six years early, transferring the property to the General Services Administration at no cost. This physical downsizing aligns with Vought's stated desire to substantially shrink the bureau that was created by Congress in 2010 following the financial crisis. The administration is simultaneously pursuing workforce reductions at the CFPB. Government lawyers have proposed cutting the bureau's staff by more than half, from roughly 1,100 employees to about 550. This comes after the Trump administration inherited a bureau with more than 1,750 employees at the start of the second term. The National Treasury Employees Union has challenged this reduction in force, and a court-ordered stay currently prevents large-scale terminations from moving forward. The administration withdrew an earlier proposal that could have eliminated up to 90 percent of staff. Under Vought's leadership, the CFPB appears to be repositioning toward increased litigation. Enforcement attorneys have been offered opportunities to transfer into the litigation unit, even as the enforcement division faces some of the largest proposed cuts. According to the American Banker, this strategic pivot suggests a CFPB with narrower focus, less emphasis on front-line enforcement, and greater attention to defending its rules and restructuring decisions in court. On the small business lending front, the CFPB submitted a final rule to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs on April 17, 2026, completing its overhaul of small-business lender data collection requirements originally issued during the Biden administration. This Section 1071 rulemaking has been a centerpiece of the CFPB's deregulatory agenda under Vought's direction. Beyond the CFPB, Vought's budget office has frozen research funding across federal agencies and proposed a 10 percent cut to non-defense spending for Fiscal Year 2027. The budget eliminates the Minority Business Development Agency entirely while increasing funding for national security initiatives and innovation protection efforts. Thank you for tuning in to this briefing on federal spending and regulatory changes. Be sure to subscribe for more updates on government policy and budget developments. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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Russell Vought Reshapes CFPB With Major Staffing Cuts and Litigation Pivot

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Russell Vought, the Director of the Office of Management and Budget and Acting Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, continues to drive significant restructuring across multiple federal agencies as part of the Trump administration's...

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