Judge blocks Trump’s move to dismantle consumer protection watchdog – US politics live | Trump administration




Judge blocks Trump from dismantling the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

A US judge has just issued a ruling blocking the Trump administration from dismantling the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), a vital watchdog agency, the AP reports.

The US district judge Amy Berman Jackson’s ruling puts in place a preliminary injunction that maintains the agency’s existence while she considers the arguments of a lawsuit seeking to prevent the president’s decimation of the bureau. The judge said the court “can and must act” to save the CFPB from being shuttered, according to the AP.

The CFPB had been targeted for mass terminations, and employees were ordered to stop working last month after Donald Trump fired the bureau’s director. The current chief operating officer has said the agency was in “wind-down mode”. The president’s attacks on the bureau, which included canceling $100m in contracts and ordering immediate suspension of CFPB operations, have caused chaos, workers have testified.

The consumer watchdog is a popular US agency known for recovering more than $21bn for defrauded Americans. It was created after the 2008 financial crisis.

The judge on Friday ordered the CFPB to maintain a hotline for consumer complaints and provide office space for its employees or allow them to work remotely, according to Reuters.

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An Iranian doctoral student who was detained by US immigration authorities this week amid the Trump administration’s escalating crackdown on campuses had no involvement in protests, his lawyer said.

Alireza Doroudi, a 32-year-old University of Alabama student, was arrested at his apartment in the middle of the night earlier this week, according to his attorneys. His visa had been revoked in 2023, but he was authorized to stay in the US while he remained a student, David Rozas, his lawyer, told the AP. The lawyer said:

He has not been arrested for any crime, nor has he participated in any anti-government protests. He is legally present in the US, pursuing his American dream by working towards his doctorate in mechanical engineering.

The Department of Homeland security claimed he “posed significant national security concerns”, according to the AP, but declined to elaborate. Doroudi’s lawyer said he was unaware of any specific security allegations against his client.

A string of students on visas and permanent residents with green cards have been arrested and threatened with deportation in recent days, many of them with some ties to pro-Palestinian activism. Rumeysa Ozturk, a doctoral student at Tufts University in Boston, who was detained by plainclothes officers in masks, had co-written an op-ed about the university’s response to the war in Gaza.

Here’s our earlier coverage of Doroudi’s case and the reaction at the University of Alabama:

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Posted: 2025-03-28 23:19:15

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