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Trump’s New Budget Chief Orders Federal Financial Watchdog To Halt Operations

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Trump’s New Budget Chief Orders Federal Financial Watchdog To Halt Operations

The lead architect of Project 2025 and recently appointed acting director for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has told the agency’s employees to essentially halt all operations ― the Trump administration’s latest move to roll back consumer protections against corporate giants.

In a Saturday email obtained by several news outlets, Russell Vought ordered the federal financial industry watchdog’s staff to “cease all supervision and examination activity,” stop issuing regulatory guidance, halt pending investigations while refraining to open new ones, and no longer “make or approve filings or appearances by the Bureau in any litigation, other than to seek a pause in proceedings.”

“As acting director, I am committed to implementing the president’s policies, consistent with the law, and acting as a faithful steward of the bureau’s resources,” wrote Vought, whom the Senate on Thursday confirmed to lead the Office of Management and Budget. One day later, President Donald Trump appointed Vought to also serve as the CFPB’s acting director.

Russell Vought testifies during his Senate Budget Committee confirmation hearing to be director of the Trump administration’s Office of Management and Budget on Jan. 22.

Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The CFPB was created in 2011 by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) as a response to the regulatory failures of the 2008 financial crisis. The watchdog agency targets big banks and corporations engaging in unfair and deceptive practices that end up financially harming consumers.

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Vought’s message is a more severe iteration of Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s order earlier this month, which essentially told CFPB staff to stop doing their job. On top of Bessent’s order, the new acting director added supervision to the freeze.

The bureau’s ceased operations mean that those financial institutions can rip off consumers essentially without any kind of oversight and enforced regulation. Consumers would no longer be protected from predatory financial practices, under the guise of cutting wasteful spending.

“Vought is giving big banks and giant corporations the green light to scam families,” Warren posted Saturday night on X. “The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has returned over $21 billion to families cheated by Wall Street. Republicans have failed to gut it in Congress and in the courts. They will fail again.”

The senator is likely referring to a 2023 vote in which the House defeated right-wing efforts to defund the CFPB, with 78 Republicans joining all Democrats in opposing the measure. Still, Republicans on the Senate Banking Committee applauded Vought’s decision to gut the bureau.

“Accountability at the CFPB is long overdue. From [former Director Rohit] Chopra’s regulation by blog post to repeatedly ignoring the Chairman’s calls to stop rule makings after the election,” the committee said on X. “Acting Dir. Vought will bring responsibility back to the CFPB & refocus its mission to serve the American people.”

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Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) questions Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Rohit Chopra during a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on Nov. 30, 2023.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) questions Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Rohit Chopra during a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on Nov. 30, 2023.

Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call via Getty Images

The CFPB has faced criticism for getting its funding directly from the Federal Reserve instead of through the congressional appropriations process, making quarterly requests to the Fed that are “reasonably necessary” so that it can carry out its duties. Despite anger from the right, the Supreme Court ruled last year that the watchdog group’s funding structure is constitutional.

On Saturday, Vought sent a letter to Fed Chairman Jerome Powell about the third quarter of Fiscal Year 2025. The letter, obtained by RealClearPolitics, included a startling development: that the CFPB is requesting $0.

“I have determined that no additional funds are necessary to carry out the authorities of the Bureau for Fiscal Year 2025,” said Vought, calling the agency’s balance of $711.6 million “excessive.” The acting director reiterated his explanation on social media.

Vought’s decision is just the latest in an avalanche of dangerous moves by the Trump administration to shrink the federal government and consolidate power ― goals that were cited in Project 2025, the disturbing conservative blueprint to overhaul the federal government that was chiefly led by Vought himself.

After his confirmation vote on Thursday, Vought is now also in charge of the Office of Management and Budget where he’s expected to continue carrying out the blueprint with the help of Elon Musk, who is not a government worker, and his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which is not a government agency.

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On Friday, DOGE officials were granted administrative access to CFPB’s headquarters and systems, according to CNN and The New York Times.

“When a bunch of billionaires tell you they know what’s best for you, hang onto your wallet. Over the past few weeks, Republican politicians and billionaires have come out swinging with lies about the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, hoping they can pave the way to ‘delete’ the agency,” Warren said in a Dec. 11 op-ed in The Boston Globe.

“But if you have a checking account, credit card, mortgage or student loan, you might want to know what it could mean for you if the CFPB disappears,” she continued. “That’s the dangerous promise of Project 2025.”

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On X, Musk posted “CFPB RIP” with an emoji of a gravestone, hours after DOGE officials reportedly gained access to the agency’s building. As of Sunday, the CFPB’s account on X is no longer available, and the homepage of the agency’s website says, “404: Page not found.”

Finance

Goldman Sachs Sets $1 Trillion M&A Record

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Goldman Sachs Sets  Trillion M&A Record

Breaking a six-month record, the investment banking giant capitalizes on a surging wave of global megadeals.

Goldman Sachs said it had advised on more than $1 trillion of announced global mergers and acquisitions so far this year, the fastest any investment bank has reached that milestone in a six-month period, citing data from capital markets data provider Dealogic.

The bank attributed the milestone to a string of marquee mandates, including serving as co-financial adviser to Dominion Energy on its roughly $67 billion sale to rival utility NextEra Energy, announced last month, along with other major transactions.

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Rise of the Megadeal

Goldman reported that its investment banking fees rose 48%, to $2.8 billion in the first quarter. It’s a reflection of the “K-shaped” M&A market, where megadeals are the dominant force, but deal volumes are declining, and mid-market activity is subdued. 

Data compiled by PwC revealed that the global M&A market is on track to reach $4 trillion in 2026, a 13% annual increase, with major sales estimated to account for 48% of deal value worldwide, a significant expansion from two years ago. 

“Goldman has been the global leader in M&A advisory fees for more than 90 consecutive quarters. The fact that it’s reaping benefits from a moment of megadeal activity simply proves the strength of its franchise,” said Mark Narron, senior director at Fitch Ratings. “However, advisory revenues are generally a small share of total revenues. In 2021, which was Goldman’s record year for advisory, advisory revenues contributed only 10% of total revenues.” 

Fitch says it’s difficult to forecast whether Goldman’s advisory revenues will continue to climb, given the cyclical nature of advisory fees and uneven regional M&A trends — with most deal activity still concentrated in the U.S.

Fitch expects M&A activity to be sensitive to market conditions, economic growth, geopolitical events, and interest rates. Global growth is estimated to decelerate to 2.8% this year, according to the latest OECD economic outlook report. Inflationary pressures are rising in advanced and emerging economies due to energy shocks from the Iran conflict. Prices in the G20 economies are expected to climb to 4% in 2026. In a “prolonged disruption” scenario, inflation could rise further, which may prompt hawkish interest rate responses from central banks.

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Peter Taberner is a contributing writer based in the U.K.

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Rodriguez fires campaign manager over finance filing issues – Civic Media

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Rodriguez fires campaign manager over finance filing issues – Civic Media

MADISON, Wis. (Civic Media) – Lt. Gov. Sara Rodriguez, a Democratic candidate for governor, fired her campaign manager Sunday after discovering problems with campaign finance filings, her campaign said.

The campaign said the person was terminated effective immediately following an internal review that found “serious mismanagement and inaccuracies” in reports they prepared. Staff identified the issues late last week and alerted Rodriguez, who then moved to secure campaign accounts and remove the staffer.

The campaign said it plans to contact the Wisconsin Ethics Commission on Monday to correct the filings ahead of a key reporting deadline Wednesday.

Full statement below.

“The Sara Rodriguez for Wisconsin campaign has terminated its campaign manager, effective today, after discovering serious mismanagement and inaccuracies in campaign finance filings she prepared. An initial review found that the manager filed inaccurate and incomplete campaign finance reports. The campaign will be in contact with the Wisconsin Ethics Commission first thing Monday morning to ensure the inaccuracies are corrected. The moment Sara learned of these inaccuracies, she acted swiftly and decisively removed her. The campaign will continue to build support to win in August and beat Tom Tiffany in November.”

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Wedding budget: How to decide what to spend on your big day

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Wedding budget: How to decide what to spend on your big day

Weddings, and the amount they cost, can run the gamut from a small, DIY ceremony in the backyard to a massive bash that shuts down Madison Square Garden. Obviously, the latter may only be within reach for certain pop stars and their football-playing partners, but that still leaves a wide range for how much you and your soon-to-be spouse could potentially spend.

When making the determination, it is important to weigh two things: making your big day a special one and honoring your financial reality. Your wedding may mark the start of your next chapter, but your finances are what will largely shape your future as a married couple.

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