CFPB, Testing Trump and Republicans, Moves to Restrict Forced Arbitration

CFPB Director Richard Cordray speaking at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's 11th Annual Capital Markets Summit: Financing American Business, in Washington, D.C. March 30, 2017.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on Monday finalized a sweeping new rule banning arbitration agreements that prevent class actions against banks and other financial institutions, setting the stage for parallel legal and political fights over a regulation that Republican lawmakers will seek to overturn before it sees the light of day.

Arbitration clauses in contracts for products like bank accounts and credit cards make it nearly impossible for people to take companies to court when things go wrong, said CFPB Director Richard Cordray, in a prepared statement. These clauses allow companies to avoid accountability by blocking group lawsuits and forcing people to go it alone or give up. Our new rule will stop companies from sidestepping the courts and ensure that people who are harmed together can take action together.

The move comes more than a year after the CFPB proposed the rule for arbitration agreements, calling such terms contract gotchas that allow the financial industry to sidestep the legal system. In taking the final step to push forward with the rule, the CFPB crossed off a bucket-list item for Cordray as he enters the final year of his five-year term and mulls a run for governor in his home state of Ohio.

The rule will take effect 60 days after it is published in the Federal Register and apply to contracts entered into more than 180 days after that date.

But the rule's fate is far from certain. Republican lawmakers, buoyed by their majority in both chambers of Congress and President Donald Trump's surprise election, have seized on their power to rip up regulations that were vulnerable to the Congressional Review Act a legislative tool that has been employed to override more than a dozen Obama-era regulations. Their deregulatory frenzy is unprecedented: Before this year, that law had been used only once in its 21-year history to repeal a newly-implemented rule.

For the CFPB, the calculation for finalizing the arbitration rule was complicated. If the regulation falls victim to the Congressional Review Act, the CFPB would be barred from moving forward in the future with a substantially similar rule unless it receives support from a new statute.

Leading consumer advocacy groups pressed the CFPB in recent months to finalize the arbitration rule. At a May 18 meeting with Cordray, CFPB staff and several other consumer advocacy groups, Americans for Financial Reform urged the bureau to finalize the arbitration rule as soon as possible, according to a meeting summary posted online last month.