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House Republicans resume favorite pastime: bashing Gary Gensler and demanding SEC documents

House Republicans are growing tired of SEC Chairman Gary Gensler's antics over internal documents requested by Congress intended to shed light on the agency's goals.

House Republicans never seem to miss an opportunity to amp up their feud with Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Gary Gensler. 

On Tuesday, Patrick McHenry, Chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, and Bill Huizenga, Chairman of the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, penned a joint letter to Wall Street’s top cop demanding that his agency turn over internal documents previously requested by the Committee — spanning SEC’s activities involving corporate climate disclosures, crypto regulation and his dealings with disgraced former crypto kingpin Sam Bankman-Fried — which they say, the agency has so far failed to deliver.

The letter, exclusively reviewed by Fox Business, chastises Gensler and his staff for producing "inadequate" responses to the requested documents. It also threatens to hold a hearing, and grill Kevin Burns, the director of the SEC’s Legislative Affairs Office, and Megan Barbero, the agency’s General Counsel, if the documents are not turned over by next Friday, May 19.

The letter is the latest skirmish between the GOP-controlled committee and the SEC over what Republicans believe is Gensler’s failure to comply with oversight requests while he politicizes an agency that was designed to protect investors from stock scammers and aid in capital formation. Since becoming Chairman of the SEC in April 2021, Gensler has put forward no fewer than 50 new regulatory proposals, many of them touting progressive causes such as his plans to mandate corporate disclosures of how public companies and their operations affect the environment.

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Committee members also have been critical of Gensler’s foray into crypto regulation; they believe his enforcement crackdown against companies such as Ripple Labs and Coinbase is forcing digital-asset innovation overseas. They also point out that while Gensler was focusing on marginal enforcement actions, his agency failed to reign in Bankman-Fried’s alleged fraud before his FTX exchange imploded and billions of dollars in customer accounts were allegedly looted. Gensler, they point out, met with Bankman-Fried twice for the alleged swindle unraveled.

An SEC spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

"To date, your responses to our requests have been wholly inadequate," the letter states. "It is inconceivable to us that a nearly 5,000-person agency with nearly 150 attorneys in its General Counsel’s office and more than 200 employees in the IT department is struggling to process three requests from Congress in a timely and responsive manner."

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Since Republicans took back the House of Representatives in January, the financial committee has written Gensler eight times, demanding information about his agenda. Gensler’s climate proposal, scheduled to be voted on by the full commission before year’s end, is among the most controversial SEC edicts in recent memory, securities lawyers tell Fox Business. 

Public companies are mandated to provide so-called "material information" to investors in public documents, data that could impact business conditions and ultimately share price.

Gensler is arguing that investors increasingly need to know how public companies are managing and reducing their carbon footprint, despite its more nebulous impact on earnings. GOP lawmakers say the SEC is overstepping its jurisdiction by requiring investors to disclose this information, creating a significant and costly regulatory burden. 

Gensler last testified before the committee on April 18 and received a shellacking from GOP members including Huizenga for failing to meet oversight requests. Huizenga, at one point, chided Gensler for an odd response from the SEC. Instead of sending the documents the committee wanted, Gensler’s staff merely replied by supplying the committee with a copy of the letter that McHenry and Huizenga sent the SEC chair back in April 2021 congratulating Gensler on his new job as head of the Commission. 

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Gensler responded that, in the matter of FTX and Sam Bankman-Fried, the agency must keep investigative matters confidential.

In an interview with Fox Business, Huizenga said: "We are tired of the bureaucratic stonewalling from the SEC. During a recent committee hearing, Chairman Gensler told me he respects the role of Congressional oversight. If Chairman Gensler won’t live up to his own standard and answer our questions, we’ll make sure someone from his staff does his job for him."
 

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