Committee Affirms Anti-ESG, Anti-China Pension Investing Bills

By Leslie Bonilla Muñiz


Indiana senators on Wednesday said the state’s pension system should prioritize return on investment in one bill — not environmental and social concerns — even as they advanced another bill requiring the system to divest from China-related investments.

Senate Bill 292 would require the Indiana Public Retirement System to make investment decisions for its 500,000 members primarily to maximize the rate of return, not to influence any environmental, social or governmental policies — known as “ESG” investing.

But Senate Bill 268 would force the system to divest from its China-related holdings, saying that such investments “risk” Hoosiers’ “security and welfare.”

The two bills directly conflicted with each other — and existing divestment requirements — until the Senate Pensions and Labor Committee on Wednesday added an exception to the ESG ban.

A no-ESG reminder

Author Sen. Travis Holdman, R-Markle, told the committee his ESG ban wasn’t intended to “tie the hands of the INPRS investors,” but rather ensure that they “do not make decisions based upon environmental and social, or governance standards.”

INPRS Deputy Executive Director Tony Green told the committee that the system does currently prioritize high returns and low risks over ESG considerations.

“This is just codifying what our investment policy statement says,” Green said.

State law also already requires that INPRS invest and manage assets “solely in the interest of the beneficiaries,” as Indiana Attorney Todd Rokita noted in a September advisory opinion.

Democrats criticized the bill as unnecessary, even as they asked why it didn’t apply to other state entities that invest public dollars, like the treasurer or the Indiana Finance Authority.

The committee approved the bill 7-2, along party lines. Similar legislation is moving around the nation.

Divesting from China?

INPRS also already follows three state-level divestment laws, plus several federal measures — and Senate Bill 268 author Sen. Chris Garten, R-Charlestown, wants to add China to that list.

The system has more than $1 billion invested in China as of Wednesday, Garten told his fellow lawmakers. His bill would require INPRS to divest from 50% of any holding within three years of discovering a banned connection to China, 75% within four years, and 100% by five years.

“This is our business partner, right? [China is] engaged in multi-dimensional warfare with every Hoosier that’s vested in these funds,” Garten said, after running through several Federal Bureau of Investigation economic and security reports.

Rokita’s office, which has been highly critical of the country — even filing two lawsuits against China-based TikTok — was in favor.

“The Chinese Communist Party is not our friends. They’re a national security threat,” Policy Director and Legislative Counsel Corrine Youngs told lawmakers. “And they’re trying to supplant us on the world stage by weakening our economy, polluting the minds of our youth, and stealing our systems data and intellectual property.”

Garten also pulled from a recent United Nations report detailing the country’s ongoing genocide of the Uyghur ethnic group, including surveillance, forced sterilizations, forced labor and attempts to stamp out cultural, religious and language practices.

The bill was amended Wednesday to include specific federal and state criteria, which INPRS said it supported.

“We were trying to take that discretion from our board away, because we don’t have subject matter expertise,” Green said. Instead, INPRS can use the state and federal criteria to compile a “list that we execute.”


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