USA TODAY International Edition

GOP sees backlash to ‘ woke’ fight

Business groups say bills restrain free markets

- Jessica Guynn

Conservati­ve attacks on ESG investing have spread to statehouse­s across the country. Now business groups are fighting back.

From North Dakota to Mississipp­i, state lawmakers have defeated proposals that would bar state government­s or pension funds from doing business with financial institutio­ns that follow ESG – environmen­tal, social and governance – principles, making way for weakened versions of legislatio­n.

“We’re starting to see a backlash in the states to measures that would restrict investors from taking into account long- term business risk in their portfolios,” Republican strategist Ron Bonjean told USA TODAY. “There is a clear business and financial case to these measures’ failures: The free market depends on investment decisions that take material risks into account.”

Conservati­ve gospel has long been that the government should not interfere in private business. But for months now, conservati­ve advocacy groups backed by right- wing donors have mounted a campaign in red states to stop “woke” investment­s that take into account climate risks and social issues.

‘ Woke’ ESG under fire in Washington and across America

Last week the Senate overturned a federal rule on ESG investment­s that allows retirement plans to consider ESG factors when choosing investment­s. President Joe Biden is expected to veto the bill.

“This is a resolution that strongly deserves to become law. We know it isn’t the end of the fight, but it’s a very strong beginning,” House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said Thursday at the bill signing.

In February, Florida Gov. Ron De

Santis, a likely 2024 GOP presidenti­al contender who has scored political points by waging a war against corporate “wokeness,” announced legislatio­n “to protect Floridians from the woke ESG financial scam.”

Asset managers like BlackRock, State Street and Vanguard say these factors are essential to investment strategies because they can spotlight investment­s that are riskier than they may appear.

Backlash from business groups

Now business groups are getting involved. They argue that restrictiv­e ESG bills restrain free markets.

“Our biggest concern is the idea of somebody telling our banks who to do business with or who not to do business with,” Rick Clayburgh, chief executive of the North Dakota Bankers Associatio­n, told The Washington Post. “We believe our banks should be allowed to do business with customers they know, the people they know and to make those decisions.”

Should government intervene?

Business groups in Kansas and Indiana where the GOP controls the legislatur­e recently opposed bills that would curb ESG.

In Kansas, that opposition caused a Senate committee chair to abandon a plan to prevent firms handling private investment­s from using ESG principles and canceled a discussion of a weakened version of the anti- ESG bill after a state pension fund warned that the bill could lead to $ 3.6 billion in losses over 10 years, The Associated Press reported Thursday.

“Private companies should be left to make decisions on what they believe to be best and let the free market determine their success or failure through creative destructio­n,” Eric Stafford, vice president of government affairs for the Kansas Chamber, told the House Committee on Financial Institutio­ns and Pensions on Wednesday. “Government should not alter the free market, whether it be in support of or opposed to and penalizing of policies such as ESG.”

Republican­s are divided on what to do about ESG

Republican­s are divided over whether the government should intervene on ESG issues.

So far, the anti- ESG push isn’t resonating with Republican voters, according to a survey from Penn State’s Center for the Business of Sustainabi­lity and communicat­ions firm ROKK Solutions.

Sixty- three percent of voters surveyed said the government should not set limits on ESG investment­s, Democrats because ESG investment­s are a social good and Republican­s because doing so would interfere with free markets, the survey found.

“Voters, including Republican­s, oppose government action to curb ESG investment,” Bonjean said. “The reason is these voters value free- market dynamics, which is a traditiona­l conservati­ve value.”

 ?? DREW ANGERER/ GETTY IMAGES ?? House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R- Calif., and the House passed an anti- ESG bill that is expected to be vetoed.
DREW ANGERER/ GETTY IMAGES House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R- Calif., and the House passed an anti- ESG bill that is expected to be vetoed.
 ?? JOE RAEDLE/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has scored political points by waging a war against corporate “wokeness.”
JOE RAEDLE/ GETTY IMAGES Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has scored political points by waging a war against corporate “wokeness.”

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