U.S. Congress votes to block ESG investing, Biden veto expected
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[March 02, 2023]
By David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Republican bill to prevent pension fund
managers from basing investment decisions on factors like climate change
cleared Congress on Wednesday, setting up a confrontation with President
Joe Biden, who is expected to veto the measure.
The U.S. Senate voted 50-46 to adopt a resolution to overturn a Labor
Department rule making it easier for fund managers to consider
environmental, social and corporate governance, or ESG, issues for
investments and shareholder rights decisions, such as through proxy
voting.
The outcome highlighted Republicans' willingness to oppose their
traditional allies in Wall Street and corporate America that adopt what
party lawmakers characterize as "woke", liberal practices.
Two Democratic senators, Joe Manchin and Jon Tester, voted with
Republicans. Both face reelection in Republican-leaning states in 2024.
The Republican-controlled House of Representatives passed the bill on
Tuesday.
The White House has said Biden will veto the measure.
Republicans claim the rule, which covers plans that collectively invest
$12 trillion on behalf of 150 million Americans, would politicize
investing by allowing plan managers to pursue liberal causes, which they
say would hurt performance.
Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer accused Republicans of
interfering with private investing decisions, saying on the Senate floor
that they are "forcing their own views down the throats of every company
and every investor."
The Labor Department regulation prohibits plan managers from
subordinating financial interests to other objectives, according to a
Harvard Law School analysis, which found it makes largely cosmetic
changes to a more restrictive rule set in place under former President
Donald Trump.
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The dome of the U.S. Capitol building is
reflected in a car window, on the morning of the first day of the
118th Congress in Washington, DC, U.S., January 3, 2023. REUTERS/Jon
Cherry/File Photo
Republicans said their resolution would prevent fund managers from
basing investment decisions on ESG factors primarily. But they
acknowledged that it would not stop funds from considering ESG
issues altogether.
"This just simply says that the primary criterion has to be the
financial return on investment," said Republican Senator Mike Braun,
who sponsored the bill.
The Labor Department said the Trump-era rule failed to account for
the positive impact that ESG investing can have on long-term
returns. Industry has been split on the Biden rule, with fossil-fuel
companies opposed and other businesses voicing support.
In 2022, ESG funds were hit by fallout from the Ukraine war,
tumbling financial markets and U.S. political backlash against the
industry. As a result, those funds lagged non-ESG funds for the
first time in five years after fossil fuel shares - which they
typically shun - soared.
Republicans used a tool called the Congressional Review Act that
allows them to bypass the customary 60-vote Senate threshold to
challenge the Labor Department rule.
They are expected to mount similar efforts on other issues in the
coming months as the 2024 presidential campaign gets into full
swing.
(Reporting by David Morgan; additional reporting by Daniel Wiessner
in Albany, New York; editing by Andy Sullivan, Nick Zieminski and
Bill Berkrot)
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