Troubled by the rise of so-called “environmental, social, and governance” rules for investments, which places left-wing social activism funding ahead of sound investments, federal lawmakers are taking action to stop liberals from siphoning off Americans’ retirement funds to fund political activism.
Senator Tom Cotton (R-Arkansas) introduced the Ensuring Sound Guidance (ESG) Act, which protects “Americans’ savings and retirement accounts from politically-motivated asset managers.”
“This legislation would require investment advisors and retirement plan sponsors to consider principally financial factors such as maximizing returns and minimizing risk,” Cotton reports.
“The legislation will maintain investor choice while ensuring that focusing on the best investment outcome is the default practice for funds managing Americans’ investment and retirement savings,” Cotton added.
Senators Mike Braun (R-Indiana), Ted Budd (R-North Carolina), Kevin Cramer (R-North Dakota), James Risch (R-Idaho), Marsha Blackburn (R-Tennessee), and Rick Scott (R-Florida) are co-sponsors of the legislation. Congressman Andy Barr (Kentucky-06) introduced companion legislation in the House in June.
“Investment funds like Blackrock that millions of Americans’ trust with their hard-earned savings should prioritize investments that result in the highest returns—not fund ESG scams. My bill will make sure investment fund managers are making the best financial decisions on behalf of their clients,” said Cotton.
“Asset managers should be in the business of maximizing returns for investors, not pushing their own political agenda at the expense of everyday Americans. Our proposed legislation safeguards the savings efforts of hardworking Americans. This critical legislation not only guarantees that advisers make prudent investment choices based on financial factors, but also empowers savers to decide how their money is invested, contrary to the Department of Labor’s (DOL) finalized rule. We must take significant action to protect retail investors and retirees from the cancer within our capital markets that is ESG, which prioritizes higher-fee, less diversified and lower return investments,” said Barr.