
From CFACT
Under the deal, Vanguard commits to pursue engagement and proxy voting solely to further investors’ long-term returns. It also agrees that it will not attempt to direct portfolio companies’ strategies or advocate for steps to reduce carbon emissions, nominate directors, submit shareholder proposals, solicit proxies, or threaten to sell holdings as leverage to induce corporate action.
The settlement requires Vanguard, by the end of June 2027, to offer proxy voting to investors in funds that hold at least 50% of their assets in U.S. equities. Vanguard must continue to offer expanded choices through at least June 2032 and include an option to vote in line with management recommendations.
Finally, Vanguard must publicly disclose proxy voting records at least four times a year, withdraw from the Principles for Responsible Investment initiative, and avoid joining organizations that require climate-focused commitments or advocate specific emissions/output targets. The agreement explicitly names the groups Net Zero Asset Managers, Ceres, and Climate Action 100+.
In short, the settlement draws a bright red line between passive investing and activist corporate governance, effectively removing proxy power from a small group of asset manager stewardship offices and returning it to actual investors.
Climate watchers have watched environmental, social, and governance frameworks expand from emissions accounting to extensive scorecards intended to exert political pressure on companies. Major ESG ratings methodologies treat “packaging material and waste” as a key environmental issue, with a hyperfocus on plastic packaging use and waste intensity.
When index fund managers of the size of Vanguard focus on redesigning markets and use proxy votes and behind-the-scenes engagement to push “best practices” based on ESG scoring, they can shape real-world decisions such as capital allocation, production planning, energy policy posture, and corporate behavior on issues such as plastics. These activities are way out of their lane.
The appeal of index funds is the low-cost exposure to the market and the promise to everyday investors of tracking an index, keeping costs down, and not playing politics with investors’ nest eggs.
ESG stewardship blurred that promise.
Asset managers that hold meaningful stakes across large swaths of the market and coordinate efforts via shared alliances, targets, and engagement playbooks can exert centralized pressure. That was the issue at the heart of the Texas-led lawsuit. State attorneys general have alleged that coordinated climate-focused investing and stewardship harmed energy markets. The firms dispute the claims.
The Vanguard-Texas settlement signals a broader rethink inside the finance space. Just a day before the news of it broke, Net Zero Asset Managers relaunched with looser rules and fewer U.S. participants after a long suspension because of legal and political pressure.
Vanguard exited the Net Zero Asset Managers initiative in December 2022, citing concerns that collective climate pledges can blur individual firms’ positions. The settlement goes further, locking in constraints on Vanguard’s participation in climate pledge organizations and its stewardship posture going forward.
This settlement doesn’t end the ESG debate. It doesn’t decide the case against the remaining defendants. Still, make no mistake: When one of the largest asset managers in the world agrees to step back from the ESG stewardship model that has blurred passive investing with activist corporate management, it’s a big deal.
This is a win for fiduciary clarity, investor sovereignty, and anyone who believes private alliances and ideological scorecards shouldn’t dictate America’s energy future. It doesn’t matter whether the issue is energy or plastics. Whatever the next “environmental priority” ESG managers decide to impose, the principle will be the same: Markets work best when they are driven by consumers and shareholders, not coordinated political campaigns disguised as investment stewardship.
This article originally appeared in The Washington Times
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Melanie Collette is a CFACT Policy Analyst.
She comes to CFACT (Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow) with a background in environmental/energy policy work, especially in combatting the offshore wind turbine groups and green organizations in their plans for northeast construction of wind farms up and down the Atlantic coast.
As a policy analyst for CFACT and host of the podcast How Money Works with Melanie Collette, she’s made it her mission to speak out against harmful or inadequate social and public policy issues, simplify economics and energy issues, and empower others with practical financial wisdom.
Before stepping into the national spotlight, Melanie spent over 24 years in education, with 12 of those years dedicated to teaching business and technology.
Her background as a former educator and current Cape May County Commissioner in New Jersey speaks to her deep commitment to serving her community.
Beyond her local leadership roles, she’s also a former Vice Chair of the New Jersey Federation of Republican Women and now serves as Vice Chair of the Cape May County GOP.
When she’s not analyzing policy or sharing money tips, Melanie is a regular face on television, known for her sharp, thought-provoking commentary on today’s hottest issues.
With more than 400 on-screen appearances—and adding 3 to 5 new segments weekly—her voice has become a trusted resource on the intersections of media, education, and policy.
Melanie’s public policy work and her passion for financial literacy has made her a sought-after speaker nationwide.
Whether delivering keynote addresses or joining panel discussions, she inspires audiences with her unique blend of experience, insight, and unwavering dedication to empowering others.
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