WASHINGTON, D.C.  – U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH), Ranking Member of the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee and four Banking Committee Democrats are demanding the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) rescind the promotion of Eric Blankenstein to Executive Vice President at the Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae). In a letter to HUD Secretary Ben Carson, the Senators cited Blankenstein’s racist and sexist remarks, and the previous Inspector General investigation into Blankenstein’s conduct and treatment of his subordinates at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).

“Given Mr. Blankenstein’s troubling history in positions of power, it is unconscionable that HUD would not only hire Mr. Blankenstein, but now elevate him to be the most senior full-time leader of an organization of nearly 150 employees and a wide network of contractors that is responsible for more than $2 trillion in mortgage securities. Mr. Blankenstein’s promotion comes at a time when the Government Accountability Office has concluded that Ginnie Mae has trouble recruiting and retaining staff.[1] It is hard to imagine how selecting an individual with a history of racist and sexist remarks could improve hiring and retention at this critical organization,” the Senator’s wrote.

Several Senators initially blasted HUD in June, after press reports that disgraced former CFPB political appointee Eric Blankenstein was hired as Senior Counsel of HUD’s Office of General Counsel, just one month after resigning from CFPB. Blankenstein, while employed at CFPB, was under investigation by the Inspector General for possible misuse of his authority after racist and sexist blog posts that Blankenstein had written years earlier were uncovered by the Washington Post in 2018.

Brown again led letters to HUD, CFPB, and the Inspector General in July 2019 requesting a follow-up investigation by the Inspector General and urging HUD to immediately fire Mr. Blankenstein. Brown also raised questions about Mr. Blankenstein’s employment in October 2018, when he led Senate Democrats in demanding CFPB leadership explain how Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Policy Director Eric Blankenstein was chosen to oversee supervision, enforcement, and fair lending issues given his past racist writings.

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

November 19, 2019

The Honorable Ben Carson

Secretary

U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development

451 7th Street SW

Washington, DC 20410

Dear Secretary Carson:

We were shocked to learn this week that the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has decided to elevate Mr. Eric Blankenstein to the position of Executive Vice President at the Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae).

HUD hired Mr. Blankenstein shortly after his abrupt resignation from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). While at the CFPB, the Inspector General conducted an investigation into Mr. Blankenstein’s conduct and treatment of subordinates. The Inspector General concluded that Mr. Blankenstein “may have abused his authority,”  “may have misused his position for private gain,” and “created the appearance of a violation of the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch.”[2] Mr. Blankenstein’s resignation came just a few days after the Inspector General issued his report and his hasty departure appears to have been at least partially related to that report.

Still, HUD found it fit to hire Mr. Blankenstein immediately after he left the CFPB in disgrace. Several members of the Senate wrote to you on multiple occasions to express concerns about Mr. Blankenstein’s statements and the Inspector General’s troubling findings.[3] In those letters we asked HUD to review and consider the Inspector General’s findings, and, once the findings were public, to dismiss Mr. Blankenstein from his role in the General Counsel’s office. HUD chose to flout both members of the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Development as well as and the Inspector General by providing nonresponsive, boilerplate letters in return and maintaining Mr. Blankenstein in a position of public trust. 

Given Mr. Blankenstein’s troubling history in positions of power, it is unconscionable that HUD would not only hire Mr. Blankenstein, but now elevate him to be the most senior full-time leader of an organization of nearly 150 employees and a wide network of contractors that is responsible for more than $2 trillion in mortgage securities. Mr. Blankenstein’s promotion comes at a time when the Government Accountability Office has concluded that Ginnie Mae has trouble recruiting and retaining staff.[4] It is hard to imagine how selecting an individual with a history of racist and sexist remarks could improve hiring and retention at this critical organization.

HUD’s promotion of Mr. Blankenstein sends a strong message – that racist and sexist remarks aren’t just acceptable, but are in fact a cause for promotion within the Trump Administration. This message echoes across HUD and to the countless financial institutions, institutional investors, and foreign governments for whom Ginnie Mae, through marketing of its programs, is a de facto representative of the United States.

Leading Ginnie Mae is not a figurehead position. Ginnie Mae is the second-largest mortgage-backed securities issuer, and it is growing rapidly. It needs a leader who will both treat all of its employees with the respect and dignity that they deserve and build a strong organization with a workplace culture that will support homeowners and investors. Selecting Mr. Blankenstein for this role moves the organization in the opposite direction.

HUD must immediately rescind Mr. Blankenstein’s promotion and put in place a leader who will strengthen, not undermine, Ginnie Mae’s critical role in our housing system. We look forward to your response no later than December 3, 2019.

Sincerely,  

 

_____________________________                                   

Sherrod Brown                                                            

United States Senator                                                            

_____________________________                                   

Jack Reed                                                         

United States Senator   

_____________________________                                   

Robert Menendez                                                       

United States Senator   

_____________________________                                   

Elizabeth Warren                                                          

United States Senator   

_____________________________                                   

Tina Smith                                                          

United States Senator                                                              

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[1] “Ginnie Mae: Rick Management and Staffing-Related Challenges Need to Be Addressed,” Government Accountability Office, GAO-19-191, April 3, 2019, available at https://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-19-191?mobile_opt_out=1.

[2] Report of the Inspector General of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, May 7, 2019. On file with the Minority Staff of the United States Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.

[3] See Letter from six senators from the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs to Secretary Ben Carson, June 27, 2019; see also Letter from Senator Sherrod Brown and Senator Elizabeth Warren to Secretary Ben Carson, July 29, 2019.

[4] “Ginnie Mae: Rick Management and Staffing-Related Challenges Need to Be Addressed,” Government Accountability Office, GAO-19-191, April 3, 2019, available at https://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-19-191?mobile_opt_out=1.