Who uses the word “bogus” in a headline? From the story:
First it was Republicans like Rep. Spencer Bachus (R-Ala.), the likely chair of the House financial services committee in the 112th Congress, who took aim at the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Now, a high-ranking member of the Federal Reserve system, the agency that will eventually house the CFPB, is taking a cue from the US Chamber of Commerce’s playbook and trying to chip away at the bureau’s funding and clout.
On Monday, James Bullard, the president of the Fed’s St. Louis branch, questioned the amount of money coming out of the Fed’s budget to fund the new consumer bureau. Although housed within and funded by the Fed, the bureau, which is being launched by Harvard law professor and former bailout watchdog Elizabeth Warren, is an independent organization. It takes orders from no one but its presidentially-appointed chief. But the Fed’s Bullard said the bureau’s funding—about 10 percent of the Federal Reserve System’s spending in 2011, 11 percent the year after, and 12 percent in 2013—”is not based on any careful assessment of what the needs of the bureau will be as it attempts to fulfill the mandate of the Congress with regard to consumer protection.” He added, “I am concerned about this method of funding for the bureau.”
The CFPB will get the same scrutiny by Congress that any government agency would and should get.




