WASHINGTON - The union filed two lawsuits against Russell, acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, on Sunday after Vight issued a series of directives to halt most of the bureau's activities.
According to an email received by NBC News from two existing employees, the file was suspended and informed that employees would be closed this week, with employees suspended and informed that they were suspended, with files limiting the turbulent weekend of CFPB.
One lawsuit urged the judge to block the government’s efficiency ministry from accessing employee information, while another asked the judge to block Vought’s instructions. Vought had instructed employees in an email Saturday to “stop all supervision and examination activities”, “stop all stakeholders’ participation”, and to stop all pending investigations, among other orders.
The lawsuits were filed by the Employees Union of the National Finance Ministry, which represents employees of the CFPB.
The document centered on Vought's emails held that the judge should announce that "it is illegal for the defendant vought's instructions to stop oversight and enforcement of the work to CFPB employees" and ceased other attempts to suspend the work.
Another lawsuit explains that three Doge-affiliated staff members are on board, and the organization's internal communications system is also previously reported by NBC News. The union said CFPB employees were instructed by VOV to give the Doge team "access to all unclassified CFPB systems."
The union argues that access to CFPB systems, including employee information, should not be allowed by parish-affiliated employees.
"These employees face irreparable damage to privacy rights if their employee information is accessed and/or disseminated by individuals associated with Doge," the lawsuit said. "There is no way to revoke the employee's personnel information once it is incorrectly disclosed. Damage to employees.”
The CFPB media team did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Sunday night. One of the instructions VOUGHT to staff includes the instructions to “not publish any kind of public communication”.
In addition to ordering CFPB to stop most of its work, Vought announced on Saturday in the X Post that he told the Fed that “CFPB will not go through the next unapproved funding because it is not “reasonably necessary” because it is not "Reasonably necessary" to perform duties."
CFPB employees and allies retreated along with the NTEU's one-chapter CFPB coalition and announced on Monday that the Bureau of Protests was protesting outside the headquarters.
Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass).
According to the bureau, as of December last year, the total amount of consumer relief in various forms of CFPB has exceeded $21 billion.