DeSantis led the way and now Federal Judge’s Landmark Ruling on 401(k) ESG Investments Could Signal the End of Corporate Wokeness

Employers who manage their employees’ retirement accounts have a fiduciary duty to do their best to invest the money wisely. The law is very forgiving; fiduciaries can be stupid, they can make mistakes, and they can even buy bitcoin after the jump. Negligence isn’t normally enough. It usually takes an intentional act violating the fiduciary duty for a court to find liability.

And that is exactly what happened here. In what Reuters called a “first of its kind” ruling, yesterday a federal judge in Texas held American Airlines breached its fiduciary duty by making 401k investments based on environmental, social and other non-financial (“ESG”) considerations. In other words, “ESG” means DEI, climate change, transformers, and so on, and intentionally buying unprofitable ESG stocks is inconsistent with a fiduciary’s duties.

Specifically, and this might be the best part, ESG came into the picture because American Airlines invested a bunch of its employees’ money in Blackrock, whose entire raison d’etre is prioritizing woke ESG causes over maximizing investment returns.

District Judge Reed O’Connor blasted this type of “investing,” writing in his final order that “The evidence made clear that American’s incestuous relationship with BlackRock and its own corporate goals disloyally influenced administration of the Plan.”

Ouch. A private BlackRock client letter explained the investment giant’s withdrawal from the NetZero collective—because of all the scrutiny and legal liability: “our memberships in some of these organizations have caused confusion regarding BlackRock’s practices and subjected us to legal inquiries from various public officials.”

Actually, that’s backwards. Nobody is confused about BlackRock’s practices. We understand it perfectly. In fact, over two years ago in 2022 Governor DeSantis took the lead, dumping BlackRock from the state’s investment plan:

Until this week, BlackRock was stubbornly hanging in there, rocking its woke credentials. But now that a federal judge has found that investing in BlackRock is de facto irrational because it fails to maximize returns, the ESG giant has a serious problem. This decision will freak out other companies, who will not want to avoid being on the receiving end of more lawsuits like the class action against American.

It might be a tad too early, but this is the very kind of thing that could be a death knell for wokeness. Wokeness writ large only came into its own when it was adopted by corporate America. This decision, along with the terrific work of activists like Robby Starbuck, and legal developments like the Supreme Court’s anti-discrimination decision, may finally make it financially impossible for blue states and corporate America to keep this up.

The American Airlines lawsuit started over two years ago. Remember, our wins against woke were all accomplished through a conservative counter-revolution that played out during the Biden Administration that was working against us at every corner. Just imagine what we can do after January 20th.

Jeff Childers

Jeff Childers is the president and founder of the Childers Law firm. Jeff interned at the Federal Bankruptcy Court in Orlando, where he helped write several widely-cited opinions. He then worked as an associate with the prestigious firm of Winderweedle, Haines, Ward & Woodman in Orlando and Winter Park, Florida before moving back to Gainesville and founding Childers Law. Jeff served for three years on the Board of Directors of the Central Florida Bankruptcy Law Association. He has also served on the Board of Directors of the Eighth Judicial Bar Association, and on the Rules Committee for the Northern District of Florida Bankruptcy Court. Jeff has published several articles as co-author with Professor William Page of the Levin College of Law (University of Florida) on the topic of anti-trust in the Microsoft case. He also is the author of an article on the topic of Product Liability in the Software Context. Jeff focuses his area of practice on commercial litigation, elections law, and constitutional issues. He is a skilled trial litigator and appellate advocate. http://www.coffeeandcovid.com/

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