Trump Appointees Manipulated Agency's Payday Lending Research, Ex-Staffer Claims
Last summer, on his final day of work at the nations consumer finance watchdog agency, a career economist sent colleagues a blunt memo.
He claimed that President Trumps appointees at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau had manipulated the agencys research process to justify altering a 2017 rule that would have sharply curtailed high-interest payday loans.
The departing staff member, Jonathan Lanning, detailed several maneuvers by his agencys political overseers that he considered legally risky and scientifically indefensible, including pressuring staff economists to water down their findings on payday loans and use statistical gimmicks to downplay the harm consumers would suffer if the payday restrictions were repealed. A copy of the memo was obtained by The New York Times from a current bureau employee.
Political appointees at the bureau, led by its director, Kathleen Kraninger, have pressed forward with the Trump administrations deregulatory drive despite the logistical hurdles posed by the coronavirus pandemic. This week, the agency is expected to release the revised payday rule, which will no longer require lenders to assess whether customers can afford their fees before offering a loan.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/29/business/cfpb-payday-loans-rules.html