Created at the behest of Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has the ostensible goal of protecting people from bad actors and practices in the financial marketplace.
Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren has been a prominent voice in the Democratic Senate caucus. The consumer rights proponents recently went viral for her tough questions to Robert F. Kennedy Jr. during his confirmation hearing for Health and Human Services Secretary.
The director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau ... He's an ally of Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., one of President Donald Trump’s favorite targets. Chopra has already packed up ...
As the Trump administration prepared to take power in Washington, D.C., the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau ... crisis and the Great Recession. Elizabeth Warren was one of the architects ...
The director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Rohit Chopra, has been waiting for a phone call, letter, email, text — anything, really — from the Trump administration to say if he’s getting fired.
Chopra is a somewhat surprising person from the Biden administration to keep his job so far. Republicans have long been opponents of the CFPB as an agency.
President Donald Trump’s firing of inspectors general and independent agency board members in the last week sets up another major legal clash over Congress’ power to put limits on the removal of federal officials,
In a lengthy letter to the chair of DOGE, billionaire Elon Musk, that was first reported by Time , Warren highlighted that "you have publicly called for sizable cuts in funding—from $500 billion in annual spending to 'at least' $2 trillion in cuts to federal spending—although recently, you said you may not actually be able to meet that goal."
Democratic lawmakers are asking federal regulators to look into legal and ethical questions around the meme cryptocurrency coins launched by Donald Trump.
The Federal Reserve kicked off its second Trump era right where it left off: Doing exactly what it wanted to do, ignoring President Donald Trump’s demands that it lower rates.
The Federal Reserve kicked off its second Trump era right where it left off: Doing exactly what it wanted to do, ignoring President Donald Trump’s demands that it lower rates.
CNN's Kaitlan Collins accused Donald Trump's administration of violating the law during a fiery exchange with White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt during Tuesday's briefing.