Exclusive: White House
eying executive order targeting 'conflict minerals' rule
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[February 08, 2017]
By Sarah N. Lynch and Emily Stephenson
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - President Donald Trump is planning to issue an executive
order targeting a controversial Dodd-Frank rule that requires companies
to disclose whether their products contain "conflict minerals" from a
war-torn part of Africa, according to sources familiar with the
administration's thinking.
Reuters could not learn the precise timing of when the order will be
issued, or exactly what it will say.
However, the 2010 Dodd-Frank law explicitly gives the president
authority to order the Securities and Exchange Commission to temporarily
suspend or revise the rule for two years if it is in the national
security interest of the United States.
The sources spoke anonymously because it is not public and they were not
authorized to speak on the record.
The plan for the executive order comes on the heels of another order
issued by the White House last week that takes aim more broadly at the
Dodd-Frank rules put into place after the 2007-2009 financial crisis.
That order did not single out any one particular rule, but it called on
the Treasury Secretary to consult with other regulators, including the
SEC, and to come back with a report outlining possible regulatory
changes and legislation.
The conflict minerals rule is one of several disclosure regulations that
was tucked into Dodd-Frank that are unrelated to the financial crisis
itself.
A second Dodd-Frank SEC disclosure rule that required oil, gas and
mining companies to disclose payments to foreign governments, meanwhile,
was repealed by the Republican-controlled Congress last week.
The conflict minerals rule was pushed by human rights groups who want
companies to tell investors if their products contain tantalum, tin,
gold or tungsten mined from the Democratic Republic of Congo, in the
hopes it will help curb the funding of armed groups.
But business groups have staunchly opposed the measure, saying it forces
companies to furnish politically-charged information that is irrelevant
to making investment decisions.
They have also complained it costs too much money for companies to trace
the source of the minerals through the supply chain.
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The White House is seen
in at dusk in Washington, U.S., February 7, 2017. REUTERS/Jim Bourg
In
2014, a U.S. appeals court struck down a part of the conflict minerals law after
the Business Roundtable, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National
Association of Manufacturers sued the SEC over the rule.
The court found part of it violated the free speech rights of companies by
forcing them to publicly state that their products are not conflict free.
The rest of the rule, however, remained intact and companies are still required
to carry out due diligence and report the details of those inquiries in public
reports filed with the SEC.
The SEC cannot permanently repeal the rule without a law passed by Congress.
However, it can use its broad exemptive powers to scale back some of the
requirements or stop enforcing the rule entirely.
Last week, Acting SEC Chair Michael Piwowar took steps toward doing just that,
by announcing he has asked SEC staff to reconsider how companies should comply
with it and whether "additional relief" is warranted.
Piwowar did not explicitly ask Trump to utilize his powers under Dodd-Frank to
temporality suspend the rule; however, in his statement, he spoke about how he
had traveled to Africa to study the rule's impact and raised concerns about its
effect on national security.
(The story fixes typographical error in paragraph 5)
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch and Emily Stephenson; Editing by Bernard Orr)
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