Consumer Protection Enforcement Sinks Under ‘Tough-on-Crime’ Trump
By Alan Zibel
One government agency fined a lender accused of swindling veterans just one dollar.
Another agency didn’t punish a corporation responsible for defective jogging strollers that caused nearly 100 injuries.
They are just two examples of how law enforcement activity at three large U.S. consumer protection agencies has fallen sharply under President Donald Trump, highlighting how the White House continues to put corporate interests ahead of the middle class.
A new Public Citizen report, “Consumer Carnage,” examined enforcement activity at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) and Federal Trade Commission (FTC) regarding cases that resulted in fines of $5,000 or more. The analysis found that during Trump’s first two years in office, these agencies completed a total of 84 enforcement cases. That marked a 37 percent decline from 133 cases completed at the same agencies during President Barack Obama’s last two years in office.
More specifically, Public Citizen found that enforcement activity against corporations:
- Sank by more than 50 percent at the CFPB once the Trump administration assumed control over the agency in late 2017.
- Fell to only seven cases at the CPSC during Trump’s first two years in office, compared with 13 in Obama’s final two years.
The change at the CFPB in particular has been egregious. Public Citizen found that under Trump, the CFPB has moved to terminate investigations, settled cases, lowered fines or imposed no fines at all in at least 10 instances. In one recent case, the CFPB fined a lender accused of swindling veterans out of their benefits just one dollar after the lender claimed he couldn’t pay.
At the CPSC, two Democrats on the commission have written strong dissents to the agency’s settlements in cases involving defective jogging strollers whose front wheels could detach suddenly during use (at least 50 children and 47 adults were injured) and trash cans whose protective collars could become dislodged, exposing a sharp edge (at least 60 people have been injured).
And the FTC, at press time, has yet to sanction Facebook over potential violations of a 2011 FTC consent decree over privacy issues.
For the report, Public Citizen examined enforcement cases at the three agencies from 2015 through 2018 and used the Violation Tracker database compiled by the Corporate Research Project of Good Jobs First.
“Members of the Trump administration have made abundantly clear they perceive their function as serving and assisting corporations instead of holding them accountable for lawbreaking,” said Robert Weissman, president of Public Citizen. “Under this president, federal agencies have slashed fines, declined to bring cases against corporate wrongdoers and gutted enforcement programs. The result is a government that is eager to throw consumers under the bus.”