NJ AG Leads Coalition Opposing CFPB Draft Strategic Plan to Gut Agency
Summary
Attorney General Jennifer Davenport and 23 attorneys general sent a letter opposing the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's draft Strategic Plan, which would severely reduce staffing, undercut the agency's statutory duty to supervise financial institutions, and undermine enforcement. The coalition argues such workforce reductions would leave consumers with a near-toothless financial watchdog at a time when 40% of U.S. adults have experienced financial fraud or scam in the past 12 months.
“Instead of trying to drive down costs and make life more affordable, the CFPB under President Trump has rolled back critical financial protections that were on track to save consumers billions of dollars.”
What changed
Attorney General Jennifer Davenport and a coalition of 24 state attorneys general submitted a comment letter to CFPB Acting Director Russell Vought opposing the agency's draft Strategic Plan. The letter contends the Plan's proposal to 'realign the organization' and 'eliminate non-essential roles' would dramatically reduce staff needed to perform the CFPB's statutory obligations, including cutting the Office of Supervision Policy and Operations from 72 staff to a single person. The coalition further argues the Plan undermines the CFPB's statutory requirement to supervise financial institutions and introduces a deregulatory agenda that would shift the enforcement burden to states.
Financial institutions that have historically operated under CFPB supervision should note the coalition's warning that weakened federal oversight may increase state-level enforcement activity. The letter highlights that the CFPB's role provides benefits to financial institutions through fair competition promotion, compliance education, and confidential violation resolutions — benefits that would be lost under the proposed restructuring. Institutions should monitor the status of CFPB's Strategic Plan and any resulting changes to federal supervisory priorities.
Archived snapshot
Apr 21, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Attorney General Davenport Opposes CFPB Strategic Plan to Gut Agency and Strip its Fraud-Fighting Tools
Attorney General Davenport Opposes CFPB Strategic Plan to Gut Agency and Strip its Fraud-Fighting Tools
by NJOAG Communications WC | Apr 20, 2026 | abandon defrauded consumers | affordability crisis | comment letter | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s (CFPB) | financial protections | national affordability crisis | no financial watchdog. financial fraud or scam | reduce staffing | Strategic Plan | supervise financial institutions | Trump Administration | undermine enforcement | Affordability | Press Release | Protecting NJ From Attacks Out Of DC |
Multistate AG Coalition Sounds Alarm as Scams Continue to Hurt Consumers
For Immediate Release: April 20, 2026
Office of the Attorney General
– Jennifer Davenport, Attorney General
For Further Information:
Media Inquiries-
Allison Inserro
OAGpress@njoag.gov
TRENTON – Attorney General Jennifer Davenport and 23 attorneys general sent a letter opposing the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s (CFPB) draft Strategic Plan, which would severely reduce staffing, undercut the agency’s mandated duty by law to supervise financial institutions, undermine enforcement, and leave defrauded consumers with a near-toothless financial watchdog. In the past 12 months, 40% of U.S. adults have experienced some sort of financial fraud or scam.
Writing to CFPB Acting Director Russell Vought, the attorneys general explain that it is essential that the CFPB ─ as the nation’s only federal agency charged with financial consumer protection as its exclusive mission ─ maintain a robust supervision program to protect consumers and the financial marketplace.
“Instead of trying to drive down costs and make life more affordable, the CFPB under President Trump has rolled back critical financial protections that were on track to save consumers billions of dollars. Now, at the height of a national affordability crisis, the CFPB is signaling its plan to decimate its tools to police financial institutions and prevent fraudsters from stealing consumers’ hard-earned dollars,” said Attorney General Davenport. “The Trump Administration has caused prices to skyrocket and paved the way for scams to escalate, and we will not sit idly by when hard-working New Jerseyans are victimized by corporate wrongdoers.”
In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, Congress recognized the need for an effective single regulator to police consumer financial products and services and created the CPFB. Since its creation, the CFPB has returned over $21 billion to consumers. The Trump Administration, however, has tried to fire nearly all CFPB staff, dropped 22 enforcement actions, and rolled back 23 consent orders, forgoing billions of dollars of relief for consumers.
Attorney General Davenport, along with the attorneys general of New York, Oregon, Colorado, and California, is co-leading a lawsuit to prevent the Administration from defunding the CFPB.
Currently, the CFPB is attempting to decimate a team of 72 supervision staff in the Office of Supervision Policy and Operations by reducing the team to a single person, making it impossible to supervise a multi-trillion-dollar financial marketplace. Under the proposed Strategic Plan, such staggering workforce reductions would continue.
Allowing the CFPB to self-destruct is also harmful for financial institutions. Attorney General Davenport and the coalition also highlight how the CFPB’s role has significant benefits for financial institutions by promoting fair competition, educating industries about compliance, and providing confidential resolutions of legal violations.
In their letter, Attorney General Davenport and the coalition describe how:
- The Strategic Plan’s proposal to “realign the organization” and “eliminate non-essential roles” will result in a dramatic reduction of the staff needed to perform the agency’s statutory obligations.
- The Plan undermines the CFPB’s statutory requirement to supervise financial institutions.
- The Plan’s goal of minimizing “duplicative enforcement” and introducing a deregulatory agenda will place a greater burden on states to enforce consumer protection laws by abandoning the long-standing state and CFPB partnership.
- The CFPB’s 2025 actions, along with several of the Plan’s stated goals, have resulted and will continue to result in less relief for consumers, not more. Joining Attorney General Davenport in sending the letter are the attorneys general of Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin.
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