AG Brown Joins 23 AGs Urging CFPB to Abandon Staffing Reduction Plan
Summary
Maryland Attorney General Anthony G. Brown joined a coalition of 23 attorneys general in sending a letter to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau urging it to abandon a proposed strategic plan that would dramatically reduce agency staffing. The CFPB's plan would reduce the Office of Supervision Policy and Operations from 72 staff to one person, undermining the agency's statutory obligation to supervise financial institutions and enforce consumer protections. The coalition raised concerns that workforce reductions would result in less consumer relief, citing that the CFPB has already abandoned billions of dollars in harm it previously sought to recover.
What changed
This document records Maryland Attorney General Brown joining a multistate coalition letter to the CFPB opposing its proposed strategic plan. The plan would implement dramatic workforce reductions, including cutting the Office of Supervision Policy and Operations from 72 staff to approximately one person, effectively eliminating the agency's capacity to supervise covered financial institutions. The coalition argues this undermines CFPB's statutory mandate and abandons billions of dollars in previously sought consumer relief.
For regulated entities, reduced CFPB supervision could mean less regulatory oversight of consumer financial products and services, potentially creating both compliance vacuums and increased state-level enforcement burdens as attorneys general suggest states may need to fill the gap. For consumers, the coalition warns of heightened vulnerability to financial fraud at a time when 40% of U.S. adults have experienced financial scams in the past year, with fewer federal resources available to pursue remedies.
Archived snapshot
Apr 18, 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 Brown Calls on Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to Abandon Plan that Would Decimate Enforcement, Consumer Protection
Published: 4/17/2026
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Contacts [email protected]
410-576-7009
BALTIMORE, MD – Attorney General Anthony G. Brown today joined a coalition of 23 attorneys general in urging the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) to scale back its plans that would severely reduce staffing, undermine the agency’s statutory obligation to supervise financial institutions, weaken enforcement, and result in less relief and protection for consumers.
Attorney General Brown and the coalition’s letter opposing the CFPB’s proposed strategic plan explains how 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 nationwide and the financial marketplace.
In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, Congress created the CFPB recognizing the need for an effective single financial regulator specifically dedicated to protecting consumers from harm. Since its creation, consumers have received over $21 billion in consumer relief as a result of the CFPB’s enforcement and supervision work.
Since taking office, however, the Trump administration has unsuccessfully attempted to eliminate nearly all CFPB staff. Currently, the CFPB is attempting to reduce a team of 72 supervision staff in the Office of Supervision Policy and Operations to one person, dramatically impacting the agency’s ability to supervise covered entities. Under the proposed strategic plan, such staggering workforce reductions would continue.
Attorney General Brown and the coalition raise concerns that the CFPB will effectively abdicate several critical statutorily mandated roles entirely, leaving consumers vulnerable to greater harm at a time when 40% of U.S. adults have experienced some sort of financial fraud or scam in the past 12 months. Over the past year, the CFPB has abandoned billions of dollars in harm to consumers it previously attempted to recoup on their behalf.
Attorney General Brown 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 Brown 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 obligation;
· 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 more burden on states to enforce consumer protection laws by abandoning the long-standing state and CFPB partnership; and
· 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 Brown in sending the letter are the attorneys general of Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Hawaiʻi, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin.
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