Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Facebook’s Calibra"


4 mentions found


Lawmakers tussle over GOP efforts to thwart ESG investing
  + stars: | 2023-07-12 | by ( Chelsey Cox | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +4 min
WASHINGTON — House lawmakers clashed Wednesday over federally mandated environmental, social and governance disclosure requirements for companies rolled out amid concerns over growing climate disasters. The GOP majority committee members decried the disclosure rules as part of a broader push to discourage ESG investing nationwide. Democrats defended them as necessary to promote responsible investing to reduce inequities and curb climate change. "These politically motivated regulations not only discouraged private companies from going public but also hinder the competitiveness of American public companies." Democratic Rep. Maxine Waters, meanwhile, criticized Republicans' attempts to undermine what she called the federal government's responsibility to hold public companies accountable for ESG.
Persons: Patrick McHenry, Maxine Waters, David Marcus, Facebook’s Calibra, Biden, Waters, Gary Gensler, Joe Biden, Andy Barr, Benjamin Zycher, Zycher, Juan Vargas, Vargas Organizations: Financial, Consumers, Investors, American, WASHINGTON —, Republican, Financial Services, GOP, Securities and Exchange, SEC, Democratic, ESG, European Union, Labor Department, Republicans, American Enterprise Institute Locations: Washington , U.S, McHenry, R, Ky
WASHINGTON – As Republicans in the House dig in to investigate environmental, social and governance, or ESG, investing, a major industry group that represents thousands of companies is urging them to make reforms. The letter is addressed to committee Chairman Rep. Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., and ranking member Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif. The letter underscores the business muscle behind the GOP's battle against policies that back ESG investing. ESG investing has become a heated policy battleground. Progressive Democratic lawmakers have pushed back, arguing that considering ESG makes investors more aware of potential risks and opportunities.
Persons: Patrick McHenry, Maxine Waters, David Marcus, Facebook’s Calibra, McHenry, ESG Organizations: Financial, Consumers, Investors, American, WASHINGTON –, National Association of Manufacturers, Financial Services Committee, SEC, CNBC, NAM, Johnson, Exxon Mobil, Pfizer, Progressive Democratic Locations: Washington , U.S, R
WASHINGTON — A bipartisan group of lawmakers overseeing the recent turmoil in the banking sector said Wednesday that they aim to increase Americans' confidence in the banking industry after Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank collapsed over the last two weeks. Regulators and lawmakers are also trying to contain further damage to the economy and reinforce confidence in the banking system. Sen. Tim Scott, a South Carolina Republican and ranking member of the Senate Banking Committee, also said writing new laws should take a back seat at the hearings to investigating what happened. We can't legislate that either in the financial sector or among financial institutions management, nor with the regulators." Sen. Sherrod Brown, an Ohio Democrat and chairman of Senate Banking Committee, compared the SVB collapse to the devastating train crash in East Palestine, Ohio.
"I don't think that's a proper characterization of my view," McHenry said in an interview with CNBC Senior Congressional Correspondent Ylan Mui. What I think corporations should do is focus on their key knitting," he said. Vanguard Group also had been scheduled to testify, but after the fund giant abandoned an investment industry climate alliance, that changed. McHenry, rated as one of the most moderate House Republicans by non-profit GovTrack US, doesn't seem interested in the state approach. "It plays politics with corporations, in the name of having corporations not play politics."
Total: 4