Another Federal Judge Blocks Trump From Doing What Voters Elected Him To Do

A federal judge has temporarily blocked mass layoffs at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), halting a plan that would have eliminated nearly 90% of the agency’s workforce. The firings followed a Trump-led push to restructure the CFPB, an agency long criticized by conservatives.

Key Facts: Mass Layoffs Blocked at CFPB by Federal Judge

  • Between 1,400 and 1,500 CFPB employees—nearly 90%—were dismissed before the court’s intervention.
  • President Trump and Elon Musk have called for the CFPB to be abolished, citing political bias and inefficiency.
  • A federal judge issued an emergency ruling halting the layoffs, citing possible violations of prior court orders.
  • The CFPB memo outlined major shifts in oversight priorities, including fewer supervisory events and a return to bank-focused regulation.
  • Dismissed employees were ordered to retain computer access despite receiving termination notices.

The Rest of the Story: Court Freezes Sweeping Job Cuts at CFPB

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau planned to downsize dramatically by laying off nearly 1,500 employees.

These cuts followed an internal memo that announced sweeping structural changes, including halving supervisory exams and refocusing efforts on traditional banks over non-depository institutions.

Critics of the CFPB, including President Trump and Elon Musk, argue the agency is politically motivated and wasteful.

However, court records show the Trump administration intends to keep the agency functioning in some form, albeit drastically restructured.

U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson intervened after concerns were raised that the administration violated an earlier court injunction.

During an emergency hearing, she ordered that the terminated staff retain access to their systems while the legal review continues.

Commentary: Weaponized Judicial Branch Is Undermining Voter Will

This story is yet another example of how the judicial branch is stepping in to undermine the lawful authority of a sitting president.

President Trump was elected on promises to cut government waste and restore balance to bloated agencies like the CFPB—an institution that has long operated without real oversight.

Instead of letting the executive branch do its job, a single judge halted the will of the American people and preserved an agency whose entire foundation is controversial.

The CFPB was originally created during the Obama administration under circumstances many see as an end-run around traditional accountability.

If courts can freeze every reform effort with vague claims of “process violations,” then meaningful change will never happen.

These judges are not interpreting law—they’re wielding power to block a duly elected president from carrying out the agenda he ran and won on.

Enough is enough.

The Constitution gives the president broad authority over the executive branch.

The judicial overreach we’re seeing isn’t just activism—it’s an attempted administrative coup.

The Bottom Line: Why Federal Bureaucracy Is Fighting Trump’s Authority

A federal judge temporarily halted President Trump’s aggressive downsizing of the CFPB, once again putting the courts at odds with executive authority.

While the agency faces legitimate criticism for overreach, judicial interference is now standing in the way of much-needed reform.

This ruling sets a troubling precedent where bureaucracy shields itself from accountability through legal maneuvering.

The longer this continues, the harder it becomes to restore control to the people’s elected leaders.

Sign Up For The TFPP Wire Newsletter

By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use. You may opt out at any time.

Read Next

House Democrats Wanting to Go To El Salvador To Check On Gang Members Just Got Bad News

President Trump Signs EO to Lower Cost of Wide Range of Prescription Medications

College Student Who Set Fire To Two Cybertrucks Just Learned He Made a BIG Mistake

Hollywood Exodus Accelerates as Los Angeles Set to Become ‘The New Detroit’

Associated Press Gets Smacked Down By a Federal Judge in Dispute With The Trump Administration