More:Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Has 2 Bosses Claiming Control
WASHINGTON — On Monday, Mick Mulvaney, the acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, brought in doughnuts. Around the same time, Leandra English, the agency’s other acting director, sent an all-staff email thanking employees for their service.
Awkward.
And so it goes in a capital city defined by its dysfunction, at an agency where two public servants, one a holdover from the Obama administration and another a rushed temporary appointee by President Trump, are messily and publicly vying to lead a controversial agency under constant political assault by Republicans. Ties between the Trump White House and the federal government’s top consumer financial watchdog agency were so frayed by the end of Thanksgiving weekend that hundreds of confused employees came to work not knowing who their director would be.
“I knew on Friday who my boss was,” an employee for the agency, who only gave his first name, Ella, because he was not authorized to speak to reporters, said as he approached the bureau. “But thanks to this idiot, I don’t know.”
(He did not clarify which idiot.)
The bureaucratic roller coaster began with the abrupt departure on Friday of Richard Cordray, an Obama appointee who helped the agency aggressively expand its powers to punish rule-breaking companies. He named Ms. English as his acting deputy director and presumed acting director. The White House responded forcefully by saying Mr. Mulvaney, currently the director of the Office of Management and Budget, would be the one in control until Mr. Trump decided on a permanent successor, whose confirmation could take months.
On Sunday evening, Ms. English filed a lawsuit against Mr. Trump in an attempt to block him from appointing Mr. Mulvaney, who is named in the lawsuit as “claiming to be acting director” of the agency.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/27/us/p ... vaney.html
The resolution for this would appear to rest on which of two seemingly contradictory statutes should prevail:
https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way ... ection-burThe legislation that created the agency is fairly clear in noting how a vacancy at the top of the CFPB should be filled. The deputy director "shall serve as acting director in the absence or unavailability of the director," the law says.
That would put newly named Deputy Director Leandra English, who had previously served as the agency's chief of staff, into the role once Cordray's resignation became official at close of business on Friday.
Senior administration officials say that the Federal Vacancies Reform Act of 1998 allows the president to supersede the founding legislation of the CFPB in determining who will lead the agency until a permanent replacement is nominated by Trump and confirmed by the Senate.




