KEY POINTS
  • CFPB Director Rohit Chopra remains optimistic about his agency's goals ahead of a looming Supreme Court case that challenges the agency's funding structure.
  • Medical debt and credit reporting are top issues on CFPB's agenda, says Chopra.
  • Artificial intelligence, and credit card and junk fees are also on its radar.
Rohit Chopra, director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, testifies during a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on April 26, 2022.

Rohit Chopra has lofty plans for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to tackle artificial intelligence threats, medical-debt reporting, exorbitant credit card fees and other so-called junk surcharges.

But that agenda is under threat by a legal argument targeting the agency's funding structure, which a federal appeals court ruled unconstitutional last year. When the CFPB was created 12 years ago as a response to the global financial crisis, Congress chose to fund it through transfers from the Federal Reserve Board of Governors instead of appropriations.