Republican frustrations grow as SEC chair proves
frequent ally of Democrats
Send a link to a friend
[December 20, 2018]
By Katanga Johnson and Pete Schroeder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republicans are
starting to wonder if they accidentally picked a Democrat to run the
country's top securities regulator.
Jay Clayton was appointed by the Trump administration to chair the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) with a partisan mandate to help
public companies by relaxing rules and enforcement. But the SEC chair -
an independent - has moved cautiously on rule-changes and sided with
Democrats on more than a third of decisive votes since he came to
office.
A bipartisan consensus-builder in his 20 months leading the SEC, Clayton
has emerged as a surprising source of frustration among Republican
lawmakers and some business groups.
While the former Wall Street lawyer represents a step to the right from
his Democrat-picked predecessor, many Republicans and industry lobbyists
say he is not being aggressive enough in pursuing President Donald
Trump's business-friendly agenda.
"The relationship...hasn't been one where we're exactly on the same
page, but we're communicating," said Republican Representative Bill
Huizenga, who chairs the House of Representatives subcommittee
overseeing capital markets and meets with Clayton regularly.

"Could he have personally done more? Could the SEC have done more?
Maybe," he said, adding he did not believe Clayton had a political
agenda.
Clayton is one of several financial regulatory appointees recruited by
former White House economic advisor and Democrat Gary Cohn who are
proving to be far more moderate than anticipated by Republicans and
industry groups. Others steering a cautious course on financial rules
include Federal Reserve Vice Chair Randal Quarles, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation’s head Jelena McWilliams, and Chris Giancarlo,
chair of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
Representatives for Giancarlo, Quarles and McWilliams declined to
comment. A representative for Cohn did not respond to a request for
comment.
Republicans are pushing Clayton both publicly and privately to act
faster on measures recommended by the U.S. Treasury in October 2017 to
promote public company listings and boost private company access to
capital.
Of more than 30 recommendations, including overhauling crowdfunding
rules, modernizing shareholder voting rules, and opening up private
companies to more investors, the SEC has so far made progress on just a
handful.
Diego Zuluaga, policy analyst at the libertarian Cato Institute, said
the current SEC lacks the "vision of market-driven change" that many
conservatives had hoped to see on issues such as trading, capital
formation, cryptocurrencies and emerging technologies.
"One might expect more active leadership from regulators who have said
that this will not be business as usual."
Clayton's voting record on rule-makings and enforcement actions has also
raised eyebrows in conservative circles.
At full strength, the SEC has two Democratic and two Republican
commissioners, with the chairman typically casting a deciding vote.
A Reuters analysis of Clayton's voting record through the end of
November shows that of the 75 votes split down party lines, Clayton
sided with Democratic commissioners on 37 percent. By comparison his
predecessor Mary Jo White voted with Republicans just 15 percent of the
time, according to an analysis of the last 20 months of her tenure.
The SEC is most frequently divided on enforcement actions, with
Democrats typically backing harsher penalties and Republicans preferring
a softer touch. Clayton has sided with Democrats on levying penalties
against Merrill Lynch, Citigroup and TD Ameritrade, among others. The
SEC declined to comment, but Clayton told the Senate last week the SEC
had taken "meaningful" steps toward his goals of creating an innovative
and responsive agency, and facilitating capital formation.
[to top of second column] |

Jay Clayton testifies at a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs
Committee hearing on his nomination of to be chairman of the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Capitol Hill in
Washington, U.S. March 23, 2017. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo

“Under Chairman Clayton's leadership, the SEC has been a critical partner in
working with the Treasury Department to advance the President's core principles
for financial regulation," said a Treasury spokesman.
NO "GUNSLINGER"
Clayton's record so far reflects his management style of gathering feedback and
feeling out areas of consensus, say those who have dealt with him.
The SEC chair is ready to defer to division heads, takes advice from his staff,
and is willing to listen to all sides, said lobbyists and lawmakers.
“I have not seen him be a gunslinger. Even in private meetings I’ve been with
him, he’s measured, he’s thoughtful," said Huizenga.
Clayton has also refrained from ramming through an agenda with just Republican
backing, as some conservatives would prefer.
"Sometimes the party in the majority just rolls the party in the minority, and
that's not happening here," said Chris Iacovella, chief executive officer of the
American Securities Association. "He's not a partisan operative."
One key issue on which Clayton has parted ways with his Republican colleagues is
the oversight of cryptocurrencies.
The SEC chair has led a crackdown on firms offering investments and trading in
digital tokens due to worries retail investors may be hurt by scammers and
market manipulation.
Earlier this year, he voted with Democrats to reject a bitcoin exchange traded
fund product, a decision the Cato Institute's Zuluaga described as "most
disappointing".
Free-market conservatives and many industry advocates called for Clayton to be
more accommodating to the emerging digital token industry.
“Jay Clayton has shown the industry that he lives in an ivory tower with his
resistance to approve registration statements for token offerings. It is
frustrating," said Anthony Tu-Sekine, head of the Blockchain and Cryptocurrency
Group at law firm Seward & Kissel.
Clayton also has gone slow on Republican pet projects, opposed by Democrats, to
force shareholders into arbitration and to review rules requiring companies to
disclose if they use minerals from conflict-ridden parts of the world. In
October, he politely rebuffed calls by President Trump to drop quarterly
reporting for big companies.

Much to the chagrin of some in the financial industry, the SEC chair has also
taken a surprisingly tough stance on stock exchange trading data reporting and
trading fee pricing, leading some lobbyists to privately question why the
pro-business administration picked him.
"How did we end up with this guy?" said one lobbyist. "We can't get anything out
of him."
Some observers say Clayton's careful approach promises a productive 2019, and he
may become more aggressive with the departure of Obama-era Democratic
commissioner Kara Stein. They expect the SEC to move on shareholder voting rules
and provide greater clarity on cryptocurrencies.
"I think a lot of people would like things to move more quickly, but that's the
system," said Paul Atkins, a former Republican SEC commissioner who advised the
Trump administration on staffing the financial regulators.
"In the new year you’ll see a lot of these seeds he's planted will start to
germinate."
(Reporting by Katanga Johnson and Pete Schroeder; editing by Michelle Price and
Tomasz Janowski)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |