HR-6967-119
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 479.
Sponsored by Frank Lucas (R-OK)
What it does
This bill would establish a new advisory committee inside the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) called the Public Company Advisory Committee. The committee would advise the SEC on regulatory priorities, public reporting requirements, corporate governance, shareholder meetings, and the proxy voting process. Membership would be limited to officers, directors, or senior officials of public companies; leaders of associations that represent public companies; and professionals who provide services to public companies.
Who benefits
Public companies (corporations whose shares trade on stock exchanges) that would gain a formal, structured channel to provide input to the SEC before rules are finalized. Corporate executives, directors, and trade association leaders who would hold seats on the committee. Law firms, accounting firms, and consultants serving public companies who would also be eligible for membership. Indirectly, shareholders of public companies who could benefit if clearer or more workable regulations reduce compliance costs.
Who is hurt
Individual retail investors and shareholder advocacy groups, who would have no guaranteed representation on the committee despite being directly affected by proxy and governance rules. Labor unions and pension funds that participate in shareholder processes may find their perspectives underrepresented. Consumer and public interest organizations that currently engage in SEC rulemaking through public comment may have less influence relative to the new formal advisory body. Competing advisory voices — such as investor-focused advisory committees — could be structurally disadvantaged if the SEC prioritizes this committee's input.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that public companies are the primary entities subject to SEC regulation and that giving them a dedicated advisory forum would produce better-informed, more workable rules. They contend that the SEC's existing rulemaking process has at times produced compliance burdens — such as complex climate and cybersecurity disclosure mandates — that a standing advisory committee could help calibrate before rules are finalized, reducing costly litigation and regulatory uncertainty for the thousands of companies and millions of employees they represent.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the committee's membership is drawn exclusively from corporate insiders and their advisors, structurally excluding the investors and workers that SEC regulations are designed to protect. They contend that formalizing a dedicated industry advisory channel risks tilting the SEC's regulatory agenda toward issuer interests over investor protection — the agency's core statutory mission under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 — and that existing public comment processes already give companies ample opportunity to shape rulemaking without a permanent insider body.