The House voted 221-202 to nullify a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule requiring lenders to disclose credit applications they receive from small businesses, lending decisions and demographic data. Next it heads to the desk of President Joe Biden, who is expected to veto it, according to American Banker.
As discussed here, this summer, Representative Roger Williams (R-Texas) and Senator John Kennedy (R-La.) introduced identical Congressional Review Act (CRA) resolutions in the U.S. House and Senate (H.J. Res. 66 and S. J. Res. 32, respectively) disapproving the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s (CFPB or Bureau) implementation of the small business data collection and reporting final rule under § 1071 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Final Rule). Under the Congressional Review Act (CRA), a rule promulgated by an administrative agency “shall not take effect (or continue), if the Congress enacts a joint resolution of disapproval.”
“Markets work best when the rules are clear, so it is possible to comply with them,” wrote the groups. “Blog posts that contradict law or regulation, vague guidance that deems common practices like using form contracts or including certain terms and conditions in contracts, proclamations of the CFPB’s novel interpretation of law via amicus briefs, or enforcement actions that contradict state law, are not setting clear expectations that it is possible to follow.
SACRAMENTO — On December 4, 2023, Judge R. Gary Klausner granted the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation’s Motion for Summary Judgment in the case Small Business Finance Association v. DFPI.
Last week, Bloomberg Law reported that “Consumer Financial Protection Bureau officials have privately told industry executives that the regulator will likely unveil its long-awaited plan to crack down [on overdraft fees] in December, according to people familiar with the discussions.