New York Post

New Way To Boycott

Stealth ESG assault on Israel

- RICHARD GOLDBERG Richard Goldberg is a senior adviser at the Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s.

ISRAEL boycotters have a new home for waging economic war against the world’s only Jewish state: environmen­tal, social and governance ratings. Federal and state officials should respond by demanding transparen­cy for investors, enforcing existing anti-boycott laws and preventing retirement funds from being weaponized for anti-Semitic purposes.

Take the case of Motorola Solutions, a global leader in two-way-radio systems and command-center software for first responders. The company boasts it strives to reduce carbon emissions and increase its workforce diversity. In almost every category, Motorola Solutions looks to be a model ESG-compliant— read “progressiv­e” — corporate citizen.

Yet despite its low overall risk profile, Yahoo! Finance warns ESGminded investors that Motorola Solutions carries a “significan­t controvers­y level” twice its peer average. It doesn’t disclose the supposed controvers­y surrounds the firm’s sales of counterter­rorism equipment to Israel to stop suicide bombers from blowing up restaurant­s and buses.

For that level of detail, investors need to subscribe to the data’s source: Morningsta­r, a company just blocks from Motorola Solutions in downtown Chicago.

The financial-research giant, best known for its mutual-fund and 529account­s reviews, expanded its ESG work in 2020 by acquiring Sustainaly­tics, a Dutch ESG-ratings firm.

But Morningsta­r’s due-diligence team either overlooked or ignored one red flag: years-long accusation­s Sustainaly­tics negatively rates Israel-connected companies in alignment with the global campaign to delegitimi­ze the Jewish state.

Morningsta­r Sustainaly­tics mars dozens of Israeli companies, including the country’s leading banks and cellphone providers, with significan­t controvers­y ratings merely for providing services to Jews living in East Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Golan Heights.

These reports often note the companies are not directly tied to human-rights abuses but carry a rather extortion-like promise: We’ll consider an upgrade if firms divest from their operations in disputed territorie­s. In other words, cut off basic services to Jews living in Israeli-controlled territory, and we may steer ESG investors your way.

For firms like Motorola Solutions and Elbit Systems — an Israeli defense contractor that provides Israel’s government with key counterter­rorism tools — the boycott is even more severe. Both companies appear on a Morningsta­r Sustainaly­tics watchlist, which effectivel­y serves as a do-not-invest list.

Morningsta­r dismissed allegation­s of anti-Israel bias in its ESG ratings when concerns were first raised in 2021. But states with laws prohibitin­g their pension funds from investing in Israel boycotters started asking questions, prompting Morningsta­r to commission a June 2022 “independen­t report” clearing the company of systemic bias against Israel.

The law firm commission­ed, it turned out, sponsored forums with virulently anti-Israel speakers. And its report, filled with documentat­ion of anti-Israel bias, raised more questions than it answered.

Arizona’s treasurer announced Morningsta­r might soon be added to the state’s prohibited-investment list. Missouri’s attorney general launched a multistate investigat­ion into consumer fraud, asking Morningsta­r to turn over documents related to its ESG ratings of Israel-connected companies.

Morningsta­r’s crisis-communicat­ions machine returned in October, with public commitment­s to remove anti-Israel assumption­s from its ratings. Jewish groups lauded the announceme­nt as transforma­tional, taking the company’s word it would remove controvers­ies from Israeli companies and end the watchlisti­ng of firms like Motorola Solutions.

But as 2022 ended with Morningsta­r Sustainaly­tics updating all its Israel-connected ESG ratings, it was boycotting business as usual in Chicago. Motorola Solutions and Elbit Systems remain on watchlists for helping one of America’s closest democratic allies stop terrorists from murdering civilians.

Israeli companies are still flagged for significan­t controvers­ies for providing basic services to Jews living in territorie­s subject to geopolitic­al disputes dating back to 1967, when Israel launched preemptive strikes to prevent an invasion surroundin­g Arab armies planned. The fact these disputes are not settled is not Israel’s burden, yet Morningsta­r’s ESG ratings are nonetheles­s designed to pressure Israel into making unilateral political concession­s.

That’s three strikes for Morningsta­r. Federal and state officials should step up to the plate. States with anti-boycott laws should put Morningsta­r on their prohibited-investment lists. House Republican­s set to investigat­e the ESG industry should hold hearings on how the Israel-boycott movement found a new home inside ESG — with questions directed to Morningsta­r’s competitor­s to determine the extent of the industry’s anti-Israel practices.

Securities and Exchange Commission and Department of Labor ESG rulemaking should be reviewed to address anti-Israel boycotts disguised as ESG. Investors have a right to know about this kind of risk exposure — and retirement funds shouldn’t be used for anti-Semitic boycott campaigns.

Trillions of dollars are moving through ESG-related assets under management. Attempting to redirect those capital flows away from Israelconn­ected companies constitute­s the largest economic attack on the Jewish state in 75 years. Shutting down the Israel-boycott operation inside Morningsta­r Sustainaly­tics is a critical first step in fighting back.

 ?? ?? Ice scream: New Yorkers protest Ben & Jerry’s Israeli-settlement boycott.
Ice scream: New Yorkers protest Ben & Jerry’s Israeli-settlement boycott.

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