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Richard Cordray, the nominee to head the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, testifies at his hearing Tuesday.
Richard Cordray, the nominee to head the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, testifies at his hearing Tuesday.
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WASHINGTON — Senate Republicans said Tuesday that the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has too much unfettered power and President Barack Obama’s choice to head the agency should not be approved.

But at a Senate Banking Committee confirmation hearing on Richard Cordray’s nomination, Democrats said the GOP was playing political games aimed at scuttling the bureau’s ability to protect consumers who borrow money or make other financial transactions.

“The misleading claim of no CFPB accountability — drummed up by special interests and put forth by a vocal minority — should be exposed for what it is: an attempt to destroy the bureau’s ability to do its job of protecting American consumers,” said Sen. Tim Johnson, D-S.D., the banking panel’s chairman.

Obama nominated Cordray, 52, the former Ohio attorney general, to head the bureau in July, just as the agency was opening its doors for the first time. The president had appointed consumer advocate Elizabeth Warren to help set up the bureau but decided not to nominate her to become its director in the face of strong opposition from Republicans, who considered her too much of an activist.

Republicans say the bureau’s director will have too much power and other federal financial regulators would lack the ability to curb the bureau’s actions, even if its rulings threaten to cause instability in the banking system. On Tuesday, they chided Obama and Senate Democrats for failing to seek compromise with them to restructure the agency.

“It may be good politics for them,” Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama, the panel’s top Republican, said of Democrats’ actions. “But it is certainly bad policy for the American people.”

In May, 44 Senate Republicans signed a letter saying they will oppose any nominee without a revamping of the bureau that would include replacing the director with a bipartisan commission and giving Congress direct power over its budget.

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