By Stephen R. Soukup, Senior Fellow As you know, three weeks ago, the Texas Permanent School Fund pulled $8.5 billion from management at BlackRock, citing the firm's ESG/sustainability activism and its consequent violation of Texas state law. As you likely also know, almost immediately, BlackRock went into pushback mode, fighting back against the Texas State Board of Education, its chairman Aaron Kinsey, and the very idea that it is somehow "anti-fossil-fuel." The biggest asset management firm in the world wrote a terse letter to Kinsey and posted it, along with a thread defending itself, on Twitter/X. CEO Larry Fink did a PR tour of the major business networks the following week, while also touting his newly released annual letter to investors, which notably and purposefully avoided any mention of ESG, stakeholderism, sustainability, or any of the other buzzwords from the past few years. Fink and BlackRock insisted, over and over, that they were blindsided by this move, that they never expected that they, of all firms, would be accused of such wickedness. After all, had they not made the permanent School Find a nice chunk of money? How in the world could self-proclaimed conservatives and freedom-lovers be so callously and aggressively anti-market, they wondered aloud. Despite coming from the Great and Powerful BlackRock®, this response has been neither particularly great nor especially powerful. Indeed, it's actually been pretty feeble. BlackRock presumably has a large, well-staffed, high-powered PR team. It has its own think-tank, after all. And if it doesn't, it certainly has the resources to hire the best PR firms in the country. Moreover, it has blanket access to all the financial media – print, TV, radio, internet. It's run by smart people, who have hired smart people, who have hired other smart people, all of whom have known for years that this sort of response to their investment agenda was coming. Yet even so, critics and other posters picked apart the G&P BlackRock® in its response thread to Aaron Kinsey. Will Hild, the Executive Director of Consumers Research, obliterated BlackRock's claim that it had no warning that it could lose management of the School Fund money in his own thread on Twitter/X. A broad coalition of market players and watchdogs, led by the State Financial Officers Foundation, banded together to issue a public statement supporting Kinsey and his actions, and all BlackRock could do in response was complain all the louder about how unfair the whole thing is. All things considered, Larry Fink and Co. flubbed this one. What's interesting about this episode is that it is, in many ways, reflective of the ESG industrial complex's entire response to the pushback against their political meddling. It's not just that BlackRock flubbed this one. It's that they've flubbed every one for the last three years at least. And so have the rest of the ESG players. When confronted with the case that they are politicizing capital markets and, by extension, threatening both the goose of American capitalism and the golden eggs she lays, the ESG players inevitably default to what amounts to schoolyard bullying: "Nuh-uh! You are!" Part of this, of course, is the nature of the argument. Those who oppose ESG and want corporations to focus on their primary responsibilities (producing and delivering services, pleasing customers, creating wealth for employees and shareholders, etc.) simply have the better case. It is not easy to flip an argument on one's accuser, in part because doing so requires you to start from the position: "Nuh-uh! You are!" The bigger part of the problem for ESG's most vociferous advocates, however, is the fact that they never expected any serious opposition to their cause and its goals, and even today, several years after the pushback began in earnest, still don't take it seriously. The bigger part of the problem, as noted above, is that they have "blanket access to all the financial media – print, TV, radio, internet." More than a decade ago, James Taranto, the editor in charge of the editorial page at The Wall Street Journal, and R. Emmett Tyrrell, the founder and editor-in-chief of The American Spectator, combined forces to formulate what became known as "the Taranto Principle." It postulates that the mainstream media's leftward tilt creates innumerable problems for left-of-center politicians, who don't quite seem to understand that the "average American" doesn't share the background and prejudices of the "average" New York Times columnist. Tyrrell put it this way: |