When the Watchdog Apologizes to the House It's Watching
Senator Elizabeth Warren isn't happy about the latest development at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and she's making sure everyone knows it. The Massachusetts Democrat took to X on Monday to slam President Donald Trump and Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought for what she describes as undermining "the financial cop on the beat" that protects consumers from getting scammed.
The controversy centers on a new policy requiring CFPB Supervision Division Examiners to recite what's being called a "Humility Pledge" to each financial organization they supervise at the start of examinations. Yes, you read that right—the regulators now have to read a pledge to the companies they're regulating.
According to the Bureau's statement, these changes aim to make examinations more "respectful, prompt, professional, and under budget." Warren sees it differently. She framed the move as the administration's attempt to "kiss up to the big banks" and accused Trump of putting "Wall Street First."
The Battle Over Consumer Protection
This isn't just bureaucratic theater for Warren—it's personal. She played an instrumental role in creating the CFPB following the 2008 financial crisis, and she's been defending the institution fiercely in recent months.
Earlier this month, Warren accused the administration of trying to gut an agency responsible for returning $21 billion to Americans who were "scammed." That criticism came after a court ruling declared the agency's funding mechanism illegal, creating an existential threat to the bureau's operations.
The Trump administration hasn't been shy about its hostility toward the CFPB. During an appearance on "The Charlie Kirk Show" earlier this year, Vought claimed the bureau had "weaponize[d] the tools of financial laws" to target smaller lenders instead of protecting consumers.
The numbers tell a stark story: close to 90% of the agency's staff have been laid off in recent months as part of Trump's broader push to reduce government intervention in financial markets. CFPB union members have fired back, criticizing Vought's "humility pledge" and saying his "press release and pledge are incredibly disrespectful to Supervision's dedicated workers and misunderstands or misconstrues Supervision's prior work."
Who's Celebrating the Regulatory Pullback
While consumer advocates sound the alarm, others are popping champagne. Financial sector ETFs with heavy banking exposure—including the Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLF), the Invesco KBW Bank ETF (KBWB), and the iShares U.S. Financials ETF (IYF)—stand to benefit from lighter regulatory scrutiny.
The move comes amid ongoing battles between the CFPB and major banks over issues ranging from overdraft fees to consumer lending practices. Less aggressive oversight could mean more breathing room for financial institutions that have been in the agency's crosshairs.
Crypto industry leaders are particularly enthusiastic. Brian Armstrong, CEO of Coinbase Global Inc. (COIN), called the decision "100% the right call," going so far as to describe the CFPB as an "activist organization that has done enormous harm to the country."
The debate ultimately boils down to competing visions: one side sees an overreaching regulator finally being reined in, while the other sees essential consumer protections being dismantled in favor of Wall Street interests. For Warren and her allies, making examiners read a humility pledge to the banks they're supposed to police sends exactly the wrong message about whose interests matter most.