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US appeals court blocks Trump admin from enacting new plans to slash consumer watchdog staff

By Thomson Reuters Jun 19, 2026 | 6:56 PM

June 19 (Reuters) – A federal appeals court on Friday blocked the Trump administration’s plans to immediately slash the workforce at the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau by about ​two-thirds, delivering a setback to the White House’s protracted ‌efforts to shrink the consumer watchdog.

The order from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit came in response to a revised plan the Justice Department submitted in late March following repeated legal defeats ‌over ​its plans to decimate if not eliminate the ⁠CFPB.

The appeals court had been ⁠reviewing the administration’s appeal of a March 2025 injunction by a federal district court judge which temporarily barred the mass terminations.

The Justice Department, which previously tried to cut up to ​90% of employees, had argued that it should be permitted to carry out its new plan immediately.

It also argued that ⁠the case should be returned to ⁠the district judge with a 45-day deadline to reassess ​the injunction.

The appeals court on Friday granted the administration’s motion to ​return the case to the district court, but rejected ‌the requests to resume staff cuts or impose a deadline on the district judge.

The CFPB was created by Congress after the 2008 financial crash to police consumer financial products.

Trump and other high-ranking officials ⁠have called for the agency to be abolished, accusing it of being a politicized burden on free enterprise. Democrats and agency defenders say damaging ⁠the agency amounts ‌to a giveaway to industry at the expense ⁠of consumers.

Barred legally from enacting the most ​drastic actions, ‌the administration has taken other measures to weaken ​the agency.

In ⁠May, the agency said it would reassign all staff to its Washington headquarters, a move likely to drive resignations. Earlier this month, Trump nominated a vocal CFPB critic to head the agency moving forward.

(Reporting by Kenrick Cai in San Francisco; Editing by Don Durfee ​and Andrea Ricci)