Patrick McHenry - the Chairman of the House Financial Services Committee | Official U.S. House headshot
Patrick McHenry - the Chairman of the House Financial Services Committee | Official U.S. House headshot
Today, the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, chaired by Bill Huizenga (MI-04), convened a hearing titled “The Fall of ESG: Scrutinizing the Failed Use of Environmental, Social, & Governance Standards and the Influence of Proxy Advisors.”
Chairman Huizenga delivered his opening remarks with a critical stance on ESG standards. He stated, “Across the country, investors are being held hostage by those who don't want to maximize retirement profits but rather seek to push a far-left social and political agenda.”
Huizenga likened the rise and fall of ESG investing to the dot-com bubble from nearly two decades ago. He noted that global investors have withdrawn over $40 billion from ESG equity funds this summer due to poor performance and scandals.
“The ESG movement has reached its peak,” Huizenga said, emphasizing that companies focusing on ESG initiatives are experiencing negative impacts instead of creating shareholder value. He attributed this persistence to support from Democrats, progressive activist investors, and proxy advisory firms.
“Let me be clear,” he continued, “this debate is not about whether investors should or should not invest in ESG funds. It is about one simple fact: Firms have a responsibility, a fiduciary duty, to maximize shareholder return. Period.”
He criticized the Biden-Harris Administration for prioritizing ESG initiatives at the expense of Americans’ financial futures. According to Huizenga, this approach undermines traditional government structures and politicizes the financial system.
During the hearing, Republicans aimed to highlight three key points: first, that including ESG metrics in financial reporting confuses investors; second, that environmental and social funds do not outperform other portfolios; and third, that conflicts of interest exist within the proxy advisory industry.
“Activists have hijacked the shareholder proposal process,” Huizenga asserted. He expressed concern over the influence of proxy advisory firms controlling an estimated 97 percent of the market.
He concluded by urging companies to decide whether they will allow bureaucrats in Washington to drive up costs or stand against what he described as unrealistic policies from the Biden-Harris Administration. “Republicans will continue to stand with those investors... developing policies that prioritize returns,” he said before yielding back his time.