Cox awaits panel’s vote
- Share via
Rep. Chris Cox is now playing the waiting game, after a U.S. Senate
committee on Tuesday held a hearing but did not vote on whether to
confirm him as head of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Cox was nominated June 1 to lead the SEC. The Senate Committee on
Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs questioned him along with Roel C.
Campos and Annette Nazareth, who are Democratic nominees for seats on
the commission.
The banking committee could vote to confirm the three nominees
Thursday, after which the full Senate would vote.
Cox told the committee he will work to make sure the SEC is
consistent in making and enforcing rules, according to a transcript
of his statement.
“My top priority will be vigorous enforcement of our securities
laws,” Cox said, according to the transcript. He said the commission
must protect investors against fraud and unfair dealing.
Several labor and investor groups, led by the consumer advocacy
organization Public Citizen, on Monday attacked Cox as having a
“strongly anti-investor” Congressional voting record.
A report from Public Citizen claims Cox’s major piece of
securities legislation, the 1995 Private Securities Litigation Reform
Act, made it harder for investors to sue when they lose money from
corporate fraud. He also voted against tougher investor protections
in the 2002 corporate reform bill known as Sarbanes-Oxley and
sponsored other legislation that was against investors’ interests,
the report said.
“Bottom line is the SEC needs a very strong investor advocate at
this time, and Cox has not established a record that shows him to be
an investor advocate. In fact, he’s the opposite,” Public Citizen
spokesman Chris Schmitt said.
Local financial observers, however, discounted the criticisms. The
purpose of Cox’s 1995 securities bill was to stop frivolous lawsuits
by “ambulance chasers” that aren’t good for the market, Orange County
Treasurer-Tax Collector John Moorlach said.
“Chris has historically always been free enterprise,” he said.
“Let the marketplace take care of itself, and it usually does....
When those egregious fraud cases come up, you still have remedies,
because you’ve got criminal charges.”
Some have described Cox as too friendly toward business, but to
Orange County Taxpayers Assn.
President Reed Royalty, that’s a recommendation for Cox as SEC
chairman.
“If there’s anything we need in government these days, it’s people
that are friendly toward business,” Royalty said.
“If he’s friendly to business, that makes him even better
qualified, in my opinion.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.