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Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-MA, and Rohit Chopra, former director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, on Tuesday blasted the Department of Government Efficiency’s efforts to reduce federal spending, warning that deep cuts at government agencies could contribute to financial instability.
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“The damage DOGE is doing is everywhere in our economy, including with the financial regulators,” Warren said during a press call on the Trump administration’s economic actions. “There will be a real price to pay for that.”
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Chopra warned that DOGE is shuttering government functions, including those covered by major units in the CFPB, that will be crucial if a recession occurs. “All of those investigators and inspectors have been benched. We are paying them to do nothing,” Chopra said. “And we will not be ready if there are serious issues in the mortgage markets.”
Warren, the ranking member of the Senate Banking Committee, accused President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk of threatening the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.’s reputation and abilities, and compromising consumers’ confidence in federally insured deposits.
Trump and Musk “are taking a chainsaw to our financial regulators, including the FDIC, and putting at risk the confidence that the American people have built over decades in knowing that that insurance program will work and the bank supervisors will keep a close eye on all of the financial institutions,” Warren said.
FDIC insurance can be counted on “because those regulators are strong and independent, and because they have enough people to be able to do the oversight that is necessary,” Warren said, “and Donald Trump is trying to take all of that away.”
The FDIC is looking to reduce its workforce by about 1,250 employees, the agency said in a memo last week, amid reports that the regulator began working with DOGE to identify positions that could be cut. Warren has grilled FDIC Acting Chair Travis Hill over DOGE’s presence and warned that job cuts could affect the agency’s ability to prevent future bank failures.
Musk, who’s been heavily involved with DOGE and spearheaded efforts to target federal “waste, fraud, and abuse,” said last week he would be pulling back from the initiative. DOGE has hit roadblocks with some of its efforts, such as pursuing cuts at the CFPB. Musk in February posted “CFPB RIP” on social media site X, which he owns, on the day after DOGE representatives entered CFPB headquarters.