Elon Musk Wants to “Delete” the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
Elon Musk has shockingly declared his intent to “delete” the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), a federal watchdog critical to protecting consumers from predatory financial practices.
This announcement comes amidst his controversial appointment to lead a “Department of Government Efficiency” in Donald Trump’s incoming administration. Now wielding considerable influence, Musk posted “Delete CFPB” on Twitter, the platform he owns, denounced the agency as an example of “too many duplicative regulatory agencies” in Washington.
Delete CFPB. There are too many duplicative regulatory agencies.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 27, 2024
This isn’t a small-scale gripe—Musk is targeting an independent agency formed in the wake of the 2008 financial crash to safeguard consumers from financial abuses. This agency employs 1,700 people and operates on a $700 million annual budget.
The timing of Musk’s attack is deeply unsettling. It followed a podcast clip by venture capitalist Marc Andreessen, himself a Trump donor, who baselessly claimed the CFPB exists to “terrorize financial institutions.” Andreessen’s firm, as it turns out, had backed a payday lender shut down by the CFPB in 2018 for “repeatedly lying and illegally cheating its customers”—a glaring conflict that casts doubt on the credibility of his statements.
Even more alarming, Musk and fellow entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, both recently appointed to lead the new advisory agency, Doge, have unveiled radical plans to dismantle federal regulations and slash agency workforces. They explicitly aim to cut $2 trillion from federal operations, targeting programs like public broadcasting, international aid, and even funding to progressive organizations.
The CFPB, however, has been a lifeline for consumers, securing over $20.7 billion in relief for victims of corporate misconduct and resolving millions of consumer complaints. To “delete” it, an idea Musk seems to relish, would not just disrupt oversight; it would signal a wholesale retreat from consumer protection in the financial industry.
Critics are raising alarm about the broader implications of Musk’s rhetoric. His casual polling on whether to slash the IRS budget, alongside his targeting of federal employees on social media, suggests a dangerous willingness to undermine essential public institutions.
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