The Guardian (USA)

Rightwing war on ‘woke capitalism’ partly driven by fossil fuel interests and allies

- Dharna Noor

The American right wing’s widening fight against what it calls “woke capitalism” is partly driven by fossil fuel interests or industry allies, according to a new report published on Thursday.

Conservati­ves often use the term “woke capitalism” to refer to environmen­tal, social and corporate governance – or ESG – criteria used to screen investment­s based on their environmen­tal and social implicatio­ns.

Just this year, Republican lawmakers in 37 states introduced a stunning 165 pieces of anti-ESG legislatio­n, according to the new report from the strategic research and advisory firm Pleiades Strategy.

“The trend has been rampant,” said Connor Gibson, who co-authored the report.

The 165 proposals sought to employ a variety of tactics, ranging from imposing limits on public contracts and restrictin­g pension managers to forcing disclosure­s and combatting federal investment rules.

The researcher­s examined news articles, fiscal notes and statehouse testimony related to each bill. They found that the majority of them bear strong resemblanc­es to model bills crafted or circulated by four influentia­l rightwing thinktanks: the American Legislativ­e Exchange Council, the Heritage Foundation, the Heartland Institute and the Foundation for Government Accountabi­lity.

Each of the four organizati­ons is affiliated with the far-right thinktank coalition State Policy Network, whose members have also fought to pass punitive anti-pipeline protest laws and which has received funding from groups linked to fossil fuel billionair­es Charles and the late David Koch.

Advocacy for many of the bills was also led by fossil fuel-tied groups, including the Texas Public Policy Foundation (TPPF), which has accepted at least $8.8m from organizati­ons linked to the Kochs since 2012, and has also received funding from ExxonMobil, ConocoPhil­lips and Chevron. The TPPF began attacking ESG as far back as 2020 and says it was behind a pioneering anti-ESG bill passed in Texas in 2021.

The American Petroleum Institute, the nation’s largest oil and gas lobbying organizati­on, has also worked to shape anti-ESG policies. And representa­tives from several other fossil fuel interest groups have supported the efforts as well, the researcher­s say.

Despite their well-connected champions, just 22 of the 165 proposed antiESG bills progressed through statehouse­s, the report says.

“The dark-money-funded attacks on the freedom to invest responsibl­y hit deep opposition from business, labor and environmen­tal advocates in statehouse­s across the country this year,” said Frances Sawyer, founder of Pleiades Strategy and co-author of the report. “Our report shows that the effort to weaponize government funds, con

tracts and pensions to prevent companies and investors from considerin­g real financial risks is not a winning platform.”

Many of the bills that did pass were watered down before they became law, the report says. But that doesn’t mean they won’t have real negative consequenc­es.

Opponents of the successful pieces of legislatio­n fear they could cost taxpayers millions, collective­ly. And the implicatio­ns for climate policy could be even larger, because the legislatio­n could have a chilling effect on future climate policy.

The laws could create an environmen­t that discourage­s support for shareholde­r resolution­s that aim to lower emissions, said Sawyer. It could also make it harder for states to take advantage of the clean energy investment­s offered by the Inflation Reduction Act, she said, due to fears that those funds would drive competitio­n with the industries the bills favor.

“The full extent of those costs, we don’t know,” she said.

Anti-ESG legislatio­n has increasing­ly popped up in statehouse­s over the past two years. In 2021, North Dakota lawmakers passed a law calling for a study of the implicatio­ns of state funds making investment­s “for the purpose of obtaining an effect other than a maximized return to the state”.

The same year, Texas lawmakers passed a law prohibitin­g state funds from contractin­g with or investing in companies that “boycott” fossil fuel stocks, based on a policy passed four years earlier that aimed to prevent Texas from doing business with entities that support the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions, or BDS, movement, for Palestine.

Similar legislatio­n began to appear in statehouse­s across the country. Last year, Idaho, New Hampshire, Tennessee, Oklahoma and Kentucky all passed various forms of anti-ESG legislatio­n.

The legislatio­n is unpopular, the authors say, but they still expect to see more of it in the coming years as more policymake­rs take the energy transition more seriously.

“We think this is the latest iteration of climate denial and obstructio­n and delay,” said Gibson.

 ?? Jay Janner/AP ?? The Texas governor, Greg Abbott, and Mandy Drogin of the Texas Public Policy Foundation – which began attacking ESG in 2020 – at a bill signing on 12 June 2023. Photograph:
Jay Janner/AP The Texas governor, Greg Abbott, and Mandy Drogin of the Texas Public Policy Foundation – which began attacking ESG in 2020 – at a bill signing on 12 June 2023. Photograph:

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