Times-Call (Longmont)

The Dominion Post on how conservati­ve values have been cast aside as Congress wages war on ‘woke’:

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Earlier this month, Congress passed a joint resolution “disapprovi­ng ” a Department of Labor rule that allows investment firms to take into considerat­ion environmen­tal, social and governance (ESG) factors. The resolution, if signed into law, would reverse the rule and forbid investment firms from using non-monetary factors when crafting portfolios for investors — even if it’s what investors want.

The House of Representa­tives passed the resolution on a party-line vote. In the Senate, Sens. Joe Manchin and John Tester (D-mont.) joined with Republican­s to approve the disapprova­l. (In an interview with Fox News about his support of the resolution, Manchin said, “E.S.G.S by itself could just kill our economy.” We assume he means the fossil fuel industry, from which he personally benefits.)

The resolution will go to President Joe Biden, who will have to decide whether or not to veto the bill. We hope he does.

Because when it comes to ESG investing, also called sustainabl­e investing, Congress has crossed the line with its resolution.

There are certainly cases where government interferen­ce in the market is warranted — like when monopolies kill competitio­n and drive up prices, or when companies shirk their responsibi­lities to protect consumers.

The Department of Labor rule does not mandate that investment firms offer ESG, nor does it give any government­funded incentive for doing so — it merely gives financial institutio­ns the ability to offer something that consumers increasing­ly want.

Even within investment firms, not every client has to participat­e. The vast majority — including big-name firms like Charles Schwab and Fisher Investment­s — offer optional ESG portfolios, traditiona­l portfolios that give zero considerat­ion to ESG or the ability to select a combinatio­n of ESG and regular investment­s.

In other words, Congress’ resolution is actually limiting the free market. Individual investors increasing­ly want to know that their money is doing “good ” and supporting companies that reflect their own personal values. Congress is essentiall­y taking away investors’ say in what’s being done with their dollars, because conservati­ves view ESG as a form of “woke-ism” forcing progressiv­e values onto Wall Street, rather than the market responding to consumer demand. It boggles the mind how quickly conservati­ves abandon their small-government, free-market values in their endless pursuit of culture wars . ...

Sometimes government regulation of the financial industry is necessary — but this is not one of those times.

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