
Trump can shrink consumer protection agency but cannot dismantle it entirely, appeals court says
CNN
A federal appeals court will allow the Trump administration to further shrink the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau but not dismantle it entirely.
A federal appeals court will allow the Trump administration to further shrink the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau but not dismantle it entirely. The Friday evening order from the US DC Circuit Court of Appeals is a partial win for President Donald Trump, who campaigned on abolishing the bureau, which was created by Congress in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. It will give his political appointees wide leeway to shrink the CFPB footprint significantly. However, the order makes clear that the administration cannot trim the bureau down so much that it cannot carry out its statutory functions, leaving in place some restrictions imposed by a trial court judge that curtailed the president’s ability to fully dismantle the agency. The circuit panel – made up of two Trump appointees and an Obama appointee – was asked by the Justice Department to pause the entire preliminary injunction issued late last month by Judge Amy Berman Jackson, an Obama appointee. The case is among the most significant legal challenges testing a president’s unilateral powers to hobble or outright disassemble agencies created by Congress. Before Jackson issued her preliminary injunction, she held two days of evidentiary hearings – featuring witness testimony from CFPB employees – examining how Trump officials, including operatives from the Department of Government Efficiency, tried to quickly layoff the majority of its staff while freezing almost all of its work. The challengers – federal employee unions and other organizations – argued Trump acted beyond his authority in trying to wind down the agency’s work and that his administration broke other laws with its actions.

Trump emergency management officials are discussing reforms that would make it much harder for communities to qualify for federal disaster assistance, honoring President Donald Trump’s executive order to shift more responsibility for disaster response and recovery to states rather than the federal government.

In the month since the US launched a major military campaign targeting the Houthi rebel group in Yemen, the militants have successfully shot down at least seven multi-million-dollar American drones, hindering the US’ ability to move into “phase two” of the operation, multiple US officials familiar with the matter told CNN.

Five days before his 100th day in office – and 93 days since his own deadline passed for resolving the conflict in Ukraine – President Donald Trump is frustrated his efforts to broker a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine have so far fallen short, and has privately told advisers that mediating a deal has been more difficult than he anticipated, sources familiar with the discussions told CNN.

In unintended filing, feds say Trump administration strategy to end New York toll is a losing battle
The federal prosecutor’s office in Manhattan accidentally filed an internal memo that poked holes in the Trump administration’s strategy to kill New York’s toll on driving in Manhattan — arguing the government should change tactics if it wants to block the nascent program.