Senate Republicans want the SEC to explain why staff are quitting
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[October 31, 2022]
By Nell Mackenzie
(Reuters) - Senate Republicans want the SEC
to explain why staff are leaving the nation's corporate watchdog at the
highest rate in 10 years amid a flurry of proposed rules, according to a
letter seen by Reuters on Sunday.
The private letter dated Oct. 27 from Senate Republicans to the chair of
the Securities and Exchange Commission, Gary Gensler, adds to mounting
criticism that the U.S. regulator lacks the internal firepower it needs
to accomplish its ambitious rulemaking plans.
Gensler, a veteran Wall Street regulator who was chosen by President Joe
Biden, a Democrat, has already clashed with Republicans over the
watchdog's proposals on corporate climate-related disclosures.
Gensler has previously contended that his new rules are critical to
ensuring the U.S. capital markets remain the global "gold standard."
Republicans have claimed he has overstepped his authority and adopted a
hostile stance toward the financial industry.
The SEC has introduced 26 new rule proposals in 2022, more than double
the number in 2021 and the highest total of any year in the last five
years, the Republican letter says.
The letter, signed by six of the 12 Republicans on the Senate Banking
Committee, references a public Oct. 13 report posted on the SEC's
website from the Office of the Inspector General, the SEC's own internal
watchdog, detailing staff attrition and reports of discontent.
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The seal of the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) is seen at their headquarters in
Washington, D.C., U.S., May 12, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File
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Republicans want Gensler to explain how he will address the concerns
in the report and also to allow more time for industry feedback on
the new rules.
The SEC was not immediately available for comment.
Employees interviewed for the internal watchdog report said they
received little feedback on rules they had written, according to the
report.
Staff feared an increased risk of litigation because of shortened
industry comment periods, the report said.
The SEC is losing employees at its highest pace in 10 years, said
the Inspector General's report. The agency expected attrition in
senior officer positions to be 20.8% this fiscal year and 8.4% for
attorney positions, it said.
The letter concludes that "efforts to ram through hurried rulemaking
without proper analysis, deliberation or consideration of downstream
negative impacts is nothing short of regulatory malpractice."
Senate Republicans Thom Tillis from North Carolina, Mike Crapo from
Idaho, Tim Scott from South Carolina, Michael Rounds from South
Dakota, Bill Hagerty from Tennessee and Steve Daines from Montana
signed the letter.
(Reporting by Nell Mackenzie; Additional reporting by Huw Jones;
Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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