The Guardian (USA)

Biden vetoes Republican effort to overturn socially conscious retirement rule

- Lauren Gambino in Washington

Joe Biden issued the first veto of his presidency on Monday, rejecting legislatio­n to overturn a labor department rule related to an investment strategy for Americans’ retirement plans that Republican­s have derided as “woke capitalism”.

“The legislatio­n passed by the Congress would put at risk the retirement savings of individual­s across the country. They couldn’t take into considerat­ion investment­s that would be impacted by climate, impacted by overpaying executives,” Biden said in an Oval Office video released by the White House. “And that’s why I decided to veto it.”

Republican­s have railed against socalled “ESG” investing, an acronym that stands for “environmen­tal, social and governance”, arguing that it prioritize­s allocating money based on liberal political causes, such as efforts to combat climate change and divest from fossil fuels, instead of earning the best returns for retirement accounts.

“In his first veto, Biden just sided with woke Wall Street over workers. Tells you exactly where his priorities lie,” the House speaker, Kevin McCarthy, wrote in response. “Now – despite a bipartisan vote to block his ESG agenda – it’s clear Biden wants Wall Street to use your retirement savings to fund his far-left political causes.”

Their willingnes­s to challenge corporate America, long seen as a reliable Republican ally, is just one front in the right’s “war on wokeness” that they claim has affected schools, companies and government.

The veto underscore­s Biden’s new, more confrontat­ional relationsh­ip with Republican­s in Congress after two years of working with Democratic majorities. Now the White House is readying for even more consequent­ial battles in the months ahead over government spending and the nation’s debt limit. House Republican­s, in turn, are using their control of the chamber to advance legislatio­n they intend to use against Democrats in next year’s election.

The White House has argued that the legislatio­n would have made it illegal for pension fund managers to consider “risk factors Maga House Republican­s don’t like” such as the climate crisis when making investment decisions.

“Your plan manager should be able to protect your hard-earned savings — whether Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene likes it or not,” Biden said in a tweet, referring to the far-right Georgia congresswo­man who has made opposition to progressiv­e ideas her political brand.

House Republican­s advanced the bill after taking control of the chamber this year. And earlier this month, two Democratic senators, Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Jon Tester of Montana, voted with Republican­s, sending the measure to Biden’s desk. Tester is running for re-election next year in states Donald Trump won handily.

In a statement, Manchin called it “absolutely infuriatin­g” that Biden had chosen to “put his administra­tion’s progressiv­e agenda above the wellbeing of the American people”. The coal country Democrat said the rule threatened the nation’s economic security as Americans contend with high inflation and Russia’s war in Ukraine upends energy markets.

The veto, which was expected, sends the legislatio­n back to Congress. House Republican­s have scheduled a vote on Thursday in an attempt to override the veto, though to succeed would require support from at least two-thirds of each chamber, which appears unlikely.

Biden’s veto effectivel­y preserves the status quo, allowing – but not requiring – retirement fund managers to consider environmen­tal, social and corporate governance factors when making investment decisions. The rule reversed restrictio­ns imposed by the Trump administra­tion that made it harder for retirement fund managers to consider such factors.

Though ESG is often framed as a socially-conscious way of investing, proponents say weighing a company’s working conditions, pending lawsuits or its environmen­tal record can help uncover more stable and crucially, they argue, more profitable savings opportunit­ies. The popular investment strategy has become a target of conservati­ves, with several Republican-led state legislatur­es passing or proposing legislatio­n that would limit or ban their state government­s from considerin­g social or environmen­tal impacts when making investment choices.

In a formal statement notifying Congress of his veto, Biden said that the labor department rule allowed “retirement plan fiduciarie­s to make fully informed investment decisions by considerin­g all relevant factors that might impact a prospectiv­e investment”. By refusing to allow these considerat­ions, Biden said, Republican­s were “disregardi­ng the principles of free markets and jeopardizi­ng the life savings of working families and retirees”.

Following his initial veto, Biden on Monday signed into law a Republican­led resolution overruling an effort by the District of Columbia to overhaul its criminal code.

The president’s support for the measure had angered many Democrats, who expected him to veto it out of respect for the federal district’s right to self-governance. But for Biden, who is expected to formally announce his intention to seek re-election in the coming weeks, the move underscore­s the pressure he and his party are facing from Republican­s who have sought to make rising violent crime rates a political liability.

Biden also signed into law a measure requiring the administra­tion to declassify intelligen­ce related to the origins of the coronaviru­s pandemic, which was passed by Congress without any opposition in either chamber. Since taking over the House this year, Republican­s have revived the polarizing debate over how Covid-19 emerged, with a series of hearings into the matter.

Recently, the Department of Energy and the FBI indicated support for the theory that the virus leaked from a laboratory in China, though they did not release any evidence supporting their assessment. Many leading scientists and researcher­s believe the virus was most likely transmitte­d from animals to humans.

In a statement, Biden said he shared Congress’s goal of understand­ing the origins of a virus that has killed more than 1 million Americans.

“We need to get to the bottom of Covid-19’s origins to help ensure we can better prevent future pandemics,” he said in a statement.

 ?? Photograph: Richard Pierrin/AFP/Getty Images ?? Joe Biden at the White House on Monday.
Photograph: Richard Pierrin/AFP/Getty Images Joe Biden at the White House on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States