
A federal judge has forced the Trump administration to continue funding the controversial Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, blocking efforts to defund an agency that conservatives have long criticized as government overreach strangling free enterprise.
Story Overview
- Federal Judge Amy Berman Jackson ordered Trump administration to fund CFPB despite attempts to cut off cash flow
- Administration argued Federal Reserve losses legally prevented additional CFPB funding under governing statute
- Judge rejected Trump’s legal reasoning as “baseless pretext” to circumvent previous court injunctions
- CFPB faces funding exhaustion in early 2026 while Congress has already slashed maximum allowable funding
Court Blocks Administration’s Defunding Strategy
U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson delivered a scathing 32-page ruling on December 30, 2025, forcing the Trump administration to restore funding to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
The administration had denied additional cash to the agency since February, arguing that Federal Reserve losses legally prevented further funding under the CFPB’s governing statute. Jackson dismissed this reasoning as an “unsupported and transparent attempt” to shut down the agency through backdoor methods.
Failure to fund consumer watchdog will violate court order, judge rules https://t.co/9XTugRyrW3
— The Hill (@thehill) December 30, 2025
CFPB Funding Crisis Escalates
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau faces imminent financial collapse with cash reserves expected to run dry in early 2026. Unlike traditional federal agencies funded through annual congressional appropriations, the CFPB receives money directly from the Federal Reserve.
However, Congress has already slashed the agency’s maximum allowable funding this year, creating additional constraints regardless of the court’s ruling. The administration’s funding freeze represents another front in the battle over the controversial watchdog agency.
Constitutional Concerns Over Judicial Overreach
Judge Jackson’s ruling raises serious questions about separation of powers and judicial interference in executive branch operations. The administration argued its legal interpretation was based on statutory requirements, yet the court dismissed these concerns as mere pretexts.
This judicial activism forces the executive branch to fund an agency that President Trump and conservatives view as a burden on free enterprise and example of politicized enforcement that stifles economic growth and individual liberty.
Agency’s Controversial Legacy Under Fire
Created after the 2008 financial crisis, the CFPB has faced consistent criticism from conservatives for its expansive regulatory powers and lack of accountability. Trump and Republican lawmakers have long accused the agency of politicized enforcement that targets legitimate businesses while creating bureaucratic obstacles to free market competition.
The agency’s unique funding structure through the Federal Reserve, rather than congressional appropriations, has been particularly controversial as it shields the CFPB from traditional oversight mechanisms that ensure government accountability to taxpayers.














