Congressman Bill Huizenga had planned on a legislative victory this summer in his ongoing battle against the environmental, social, and governance movement.
He would issue a final report with fellow Republicans on the House Financial Services Committee showing how ESG considerations hurt investors and financial markets, hold a congressional hearing to drive that point home, and then bring a measure to the House floor that would kill one of the Biden administration’s signature ESG regulations: the SEC’s March rules mandating that public companies disclose their greenhouse gas pollution.
That scenario didn’t happen. The House adjourned earlier than ...