Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney Mick MulvaneyMick Mulvaney to start hedge fund Fauci says positive White House task force reports don't always match what he hears on the ground Bottom line MORE said Monday he's implementing a 30-day hiring and regulatory freeze at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) amid a legal dispute over whether he has the authority to lead the entity.

“Rumors that I’m going to set the place on fire or blow it up or lock the doors are completely false. I’m a member of the exec. branch of government. We intend to execute the laws of the United States, including the provisions of Dodd-Frank that govern the CFPB,” Mulvaney said at a news conference.

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Mulvaney added that the bureau will be run differently under the Trump administration than it was under former President Obama, though he did not have specifics on how.

In the meantime, Mulvaney announced there will be a 30-day hiring and regulatory freeze at the CFPB. Anything already in the works will be stopped for 30 days while Mulvaney takes time to “kick the tires” at the bureau, he said.

There will be no payments out of the civil penalties fund for at least 30 days, he added.

The department will still meet statutory and legal deadlines in that time period, he said.

Mulvaney’s remarks came amid an ongoing dispute over whether he has the legal authority to lead the CFPB.

Former CPFB Director Richard Cordray Richard Adams CordrayConsumer bureau revokes payday lending restrictions Supreme Court ruling could unleash new legal challenges to consumer bureau Supreme Court rules consumer bureau director can be fired at will MORE resigned Friday night, but first tapped Leandra English to serve as acting director.

President Trump, however, nominated Mulvaney to be the CFPB’s acting director, claiming he had the power to do so under the Federal Vacancies Reform Act of 1998.

English sued Trump and Mulvaney in federal court Sunday night to block the appointment. Mulvaney has previously called the agency "a sick, sad joke" with no real reason to exist.

Mulvaney noted Monday his opinion of the CFPB has not changed.

The dispute over who sits in the director's chair led to an unorthodox day at the CFPB, where Mulvaney showed up to the office with doughnuts and told employees to ignore directives from English.

English, meanwhile, sent an email to employees and addressed herself as “acting director.”

"It doesn't surprise me, by the way, to the extent we're having a succession challenge, as lodged by Ms. English," Mulvaney said Monday. "It doesn't surprise me that that grows out of an agency that thinks it's not accountable to anybody in the first place."