Meet Rohit Chopra, The New CFPB Director

Published by Housing Wire | September 30, 2021

Former FTC commissioner and CFPB student loan ombudsman expected to expand enforcement


The mortgage industry collectively shuddered today as the Senate approved Rohit Chopra as director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau for a five-year term.

Consumer finance experts and attorneys specializing in mortgage regulation compliance expect Chopra, an acolyte of Massachusetts Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren, to ramp up the CFPB’s enforcement activities. The vote split 50-48 in favor of Chopra.

Pennsylvania Republican Sen. Patrick Toomey said that under Chopra, the CFPB would return to “rulemaking by enforcement.” Toomey said that Chopra tweeted out allegations about credit unions, which he said were later retracted by the CFPB, an indication that Chopra would be willing to “shoot first and ask questions later,” he said.

The previous director of the CFPB, Kathy Kraninger, now a lobbyist at a cryptocurrency firm, tended to pursue enforcement actions against smaller firms, and not as often as the prior CFPB regime. Observers expect that Chopra will lead the CFPB in the spirit of its first director, Richard Cordray, who led the agency from 2012 to 2017 and recovered $12 billion in fines from banks such as Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America.

Ohio Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown, who chairs the Senate Banking Committee, spoke in support of Chopra’s nomination.

Gesturing outside the Senate chambers to lobbyists milling in the hall, Brown said that “corporations and payday lenders all have high price lobbyists, and have an outsize voice in this town.”

“The people that Chopra will be paid to protect don’t have lobbyists, or a [political action committee], and certainly not a SuperPAC,” Brown said.

This will be Chopra’s second stint at the consumer watchdog agency. In 2011, he was appointed to be the CFPB’s student loan ombudsman. Chopra was unanimously confirmed by the Senate in 2018 for his current position at the Federal Trade Commission, where he pushed for more aggressive remedies against big tech companies, like Facebook, in dissenting opinions.

President Joe Biden nominated Chopra in January but his March confirmation hearing ended in a tie, which forced the nomination to be brought to the full Senate.

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