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June 25, 2019

Rep. Pressley, Senator Warren, and Rep. Porter Denounce High-Level CFPB Staffer with History of Working for Anti-LGBTQ Hate Group

WASHINGTON – Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (D-MA), Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Congresswoman Katie Porter (D-CA) today sent a letter to Kathleen Kraninger, Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), urging the CFPB to reconsider its continued employment of Paul Watkins as the Assistant Director of the Office of Innovation after a report this week revealed that Mr. Watkins previously served as a senior counsel for an anti-LGBTQ hate group, Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF). The ADF has been designated as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center for its efforts to develop “legislation and case law that will allow the denial of goods and services to LGBT people.” Given his previous role, the lawmakers expressed concerns about Mr. Watkins’s fitness for his job considering the discretion his position has to exempt certain companies from complying with anti-discrimination laws.

“Mr. Watkin’s role at the CFPB gives him wide discretion to exempt companies — or even entire industries — from anti-discrimination laws and given his past work at a homophobic hate group, we are deeply concerned that he will use this power to scrap crucial protections for the LGBTQ consumers,” wrote the lawmakers. “We therefore ask that you reconsider his employment and his role at the Bureau.”

As the Assistant Director of the Office of Innovation at the CFPB, Mr. Watkins has authority over anti-discrimination laws like the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA), which the CFPB interprets to afford broad protection against lending discrimination on the basis of gender identity and sexual orientation. Given Mr. Watkins’s previous commitment to an organization with a mission to discriminate and criminalize LGBTQ communities, the lawmakers are further concerned over his capacity to unbiasedly perform his responsibilities at the CFPB.

The lawmakers were also concerned about the impact of Watkins’s employment on the culture of diversity and inclusion at CFPB, which has been hurt by the leadership’s failure to dismiss former Policy Associate Director Eric Blankenstein for months after reports revealed his history of racist writings. Senator Warren also recently wrote to the CFPB about potentially discriminatory financial technology algorithms, which are pertinent to Mr. Watkins’s role as the assistant director of the Office of Innovation, which oversees financial technology companies.

“Repairing the harm done to the culture of diversity and inclusion by Blankenstein should be among your top priorities because the CFPB’s most valuable resource is a dedicated civil service workforce,” concluded the lawmakers. “Fraying this culture further by allowing Mr. Watkins, who has actively worked to undermine the dignity of the consumers that the CFPB is supposed to serve and some of the dedicated staff you are supposed to lead, would be a monumental failure of leadership.”

In response to their concerns about Mr. Watkins’ employment with the CFPB, the lawmakers requested answers to their questions no later than July 9, 2019.

The full text of the letter is below and can be found here:

Dear Director Kraninger:

 

We are writing to express our serious concerns over your continued employment of Paul Watkins as the assistant director of the Office of Innovation at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). According to a new report released this week, from 2012-2015, Mr. Watkins was a Senior Legal Counsel at Alliance Defending Freedom – a legal “advocacy and training” organization that has been designated as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center for its effort to develop “legislation and case law that will allow the denial of goods and services to LGBT people.” Mr. Watkin’s role at the CFPB gives him wide discretion to unilaterally exempt companies – or even entire industries — from anti-discrimination laws and given his past work at a homophobic hate group, We’re deeply concerned that he will use this power to scrap crucial protections for the LGBT consumers. We therefore ask that you reconsider his employment and his role at the Bureau. 

 

Interim CFPB Director Mick Mulvaney hired Mr. Watkins in July 2018 to lead a new Office of Innovation, which would “creat[e] an environment where companies can advance new products and services without being unduly restricted by red tape that belongs in the 20th century,” citing his “deep expertise.” But while the press release included his work experience dating back to his graduation from law school in 2006, it failed to mention his three year stint at the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), where he was a senior counsel from 2012-2015. The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) designates ADF as an anti-LGBTQ hate-group because it has “supported the recriminalization of homosexuality” and “defended state-sanctioned sterilization of trans people.” Alan Spears, the former CEO and co-founder of the ADF, has described the “homosexual agenda” as “evil,” and written that homosexual behavior and pedophilia “are often intrinsically linked.”  While working at the ADF, Mr. Watkins assisted with the company’s Blackstone Legal Fellowship program, whose mission was to “recover the robust Christendomic theology of the 3rd, 4th, and 5th centuries,” which it described as “desperately crucial for cultural renewal.” During his tenure, the ADF also worked with the state of Arizona to legalize discrimination against LGBTQ people and ban same sex marriage. Mr. Watkins’s commitment to an organization with a mission to discriminate and criminalize LGBTQ communities raises significant doubts over his capacity to unbiasedly perform his responsibilities at the CFPB.

 

Mr. Watkins role as Director of the Office of Innovation is especially troubling given the almost unilateral authority that office has to exempt companies from consumer protection and anti-discrimination laws under policies that Mr. Watkins designed. The CFPB’s Office of Innovation is responsible for overseeing the creation of policies that “facilitate innovation” and review “outdated or unnecessary regulations” for financial technologies (fintech). You recently wrote to Senator Warren in response to a letter about how the CFPB enforces anti-discrimination laws in the fintech industry, “the [CFPB] is responsible for the providing oversight and enforcement of certain Federal laws intended to ensure ‘fair, equitable, and nondiscriminatory access to credit for both individuals and communities,’” and “will continue to enforce fair lending laws as they apply to all lenders, whether they use algorithms for underwriting or not.” According to CFPB legal analysis, the prohibition of sex discrimination in the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA), which the CFPB is “responsible for administering and enforcing” affords broad protection against credit discrimination on the bases of gender identity and sexual orientation. Discrimination in lending against LGBTQ borrowers is rampant – according to one recent study that surveyed 25 years of mortgage data, “gay couples were 73 percent more likely to be denied a mortgage than heterosexual couples with the same financial worthiness.”

 

 Mr. Watkins joined the Bureau and was named as assistant director of the Office of Innovation by then-Acting Director Mick Mulvaney in July 2018, and continues to serve that role today.  Shortly after Mr. Watkins joined the bureau, the CFPB proposed policies that conferred onto this office new authority to exempt certain fintech companies from complying with laws like ECOA for the sake of this innovation. Specifically, under his leadership, the Bureau introduced a “Policy on No-Action” and “Product Sandbox” to give fintech companies a “’safe harbor’ from liability,” where qualifying companies would be “immune from enforcement actions by any Federal or State authorities.” According to the National Consumer Law Center, these policies, if finalized, “would permit exemptions from provisions of the laws governing…fair lending laws that prohibit discrimination.” Under the policy he designed, Mr. Watkins would be the person responsible for granting these exemptions to ECOA and other anti-discrimination and consumer protection law. His previous work as an advocate against LGBTQ interests, therefore, makes him entirely unfit for this role and must disqualify him from performing it.

 

In addition to his role making policy, the continued employment of Mr. Watkins by CFPB raises questions about the agencies commitment to diversity and inclusion. In its FY 2019 Annual Performance Report, the CFPB emphasized the importance of fostering a diverse work environment and stated that it will achieve operational excellence, in part, by “maintain[ing] a talented, diverse, inclusive and engaged workforce.” To demonstrate its commitment to this cause, the report cited programs that offices within the CFPB lead during the last fiscal year, including initiatives that supported “LGBTQ-employee interests (RISE, Adelante, and Pride, respectively).” Despite efforts to promote inclusivity within the Bureau, the CFPB’s inclusion quotient, which rates employee’s perceptions of diversity and inclusion, “decreased by 5.3% from the previous year.” One component in this steep one-year decline is no doubt a change in culture among the leadership in the Bureau, including your continued employment of former Policy Associate Director Eric Blankenstein, also in a position of authority over fair lending laws, for months after reports emerged about his history of racist writings. Repairing the harm done to the culture of diversity and inclusion by Blankenstein should be among your top priorities because the CFPB’s most valuable resource is a dedicated civil service workforce. Fraying this culture further by allowing Mr. Watkins, who has actively worked to undermine the dignity of the consumers that the CFPB is supposed to serve and some of the dedicated staff you are supposed to lead, would be a monumental failure of leadership.    

 

In response to our concerns about your employment of Mr. Watkins, we ask that you provide answers to the following questions no later than July 9, 2019.

 

  1. Was the CFPB aware of Mr. Watkins’s employment at Alliance Defending Freedom prior to hiring him?
 

  1. How was Mr. Atkins selected for his CFPB job? Please describe the process by which he was selected, either through political appointment, a competitive hiring process, or another means.
 

  1. What hiring practices, guidelines, and/or procedures are in place at the CFPB? Were those practices, guidelines and/or procedures followed when searching and selecting for candidates to fill this position?

 

  1. Were any other individuals evaluated for his role?

 

  1. Please describe in detail your method(s) for identifying potential candidates to undergo this selection process. Please include any information related to background checks performed by the CFPB for potential candidates.

 

  1. Please describe your process for vetting individuals for CFPB jobs and provide all documents related to the conducting of background checks or other due diligence. Please include whether such background checks entail verifications of an applicant’s prior work history and the extent to which this response is fact-checked.

 

  1. Did any Administration official, in CFPB, the White House, or elsewhere, recommended Mr. Watkins for this job?

 

  1. Does Mr. Watkins have an ethics agreement?  Is he recused from any decisions related to CFPB activities regarding LGBTQ discrimination given his previous role at an organization that worked to develop “legislation and case law that will allow the denial of goods and services to LGBT people?”

 

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