A group of attorneys general (AG) representing 21 states have issued a letter to 53 of the largest asset management firms in the United States, warning that they may be in breach of their legal duties to their clients if they pursue Environmental, Social, and Governance-based (ESG) investment programs.
The letter, organized by Attorneys General Austin Knudsen (R-Mont.), Jeff Landry (R-La.), and Sean Reyes (R-Utah), states that asset management firms may be ignoring their legal obligation to the fiduciary interests of their clients by pursuing ESG-based investment. The warning letter was signed by Republican attorneys general for Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia, and Wyoming.
“We are writing this open letter to asset manager industry participants to raise our concerns about the ongoing agreements between asset managers to use Americans’ savings to push political goals during the upcoming proxy season,” the letter states.
‘Unrealistic’ Environmental Goals Over Financial Benefits
The AGs’ letter specifically states firms are signing onto the Net Zero Asset Managers Initiative (NZAM) and Climate Action 100+, both of which seek to shift the assets they manage to net zero emissions by 2050. The letter argues that asset management firms are placing the completion of “aspirational, unrealistic” environmental goals like the Paris Climate Agreement above the primary fiduciary duty to provide financial benefit to their clients. The letter noted a recent United Nations report stating, “... the international community is falling far short of the Paris goals, with no credible pathway to 1.5°C in place.”“None of this is financially defensible,” the AGs said of the environmental goals laid out in various ESG frameworks. “Instead, it is a transparent attempt to push policies through the financial system that cannot be achieved at the ballot box.”
Knudsen told Fox News that certain ESG goals would be financially harmful to residents of his state, which is heavily invested in the fossil fuel industry.
ESG’s Race, Gender, and Political Goals
The AGs’ letter also warns that ESG systems are increasingly pushing firms to align with specific political positions, notably support for abortion access and gender and race-based diversity quotas.“It is troubling that members of a horizontal organization of asset managers that includes many government actors would be trying to limit political speech, particularly when there does not appear to be a shareholder financial basis for the limitation,” the attorneys general wrote.
Battle Over ESG
Congress narrowly passed a bill to overturn a Department of Labor rule-making decision that allowed retirement managers to consider ESG scores when selecting retirement investments. President Joe Biden issued the first veto of his presidency, blocking the legislation and keeping the Labor Department’s ESG ruling in place.Biden also said, “there is extensive evidence showing that environmental, social, and governance factors can have a material impact on markets, industries, and businesses.”
White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre argued the Republican-led effort to overturn the Labor Department’s ESG ruling amounts to forcing investors to embrace conservative ideologies.
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) said Biden’s veto makes it clear that he “wants Wall Street to use your retirement savings to fund his far-left political causes.”