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President Names Cox as New SEC Chair

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By Carrie Johnson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, June 3, 2005

The president formally nominated Rep. Christopher Cox to serve as chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission yesterday, setting the stage for a dramatic shift in the agency's priorities, which over the past two years have been focused on new regulation and stepped-up enforcement.

Cox, 52, a Republican from California, has taken pro-business positions on many issues. He sponsored legislation that curtailed plaintiffs' right to bring lawsuits alleging securities violations and opposed a regulatory drive to treat stock options as expenses, fighting on the side of the technology firms that constitute much of his Orange County constituency.

Among his biggest financial supporters during 16 years in Congress are law firms including Latham & Watkins LLP and the nation's largest accounting firms, including Ernst & Young LLP, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP and KPMG LLP. Securities firms have donated more than $254,000 to Cox during his congressional tenure, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

Cox has an 87 percent lifetime rating from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, meaning he has voted in favor of the chamber's position on legislation most of the time, according to R. Bruce Josten, an executive vice president who worked closely with the lawmaker on the securities litigation bill in 1995.

Securities Industry Association leaders said they saw the Cox nomination as an opportunity for the agency to "reassess burdensome, duplicative, costly" regulations. AeA, a technology association, applauded his "staunch" past support.

"Chris understands how markets work, and he knows the need for transparency in financial exchanges and in the halls of business," President Bush said at a brief news conference. "He proved that he can bring people together of diverse opinions to get things done. That kind of leadership will be invaluable as the chairman of the SEC."

Cox is a graduate of Harvard Law School and Harvard Business School, "one of the smartest guys in Congress, without question," according to veteran securities lawyer John Olson. For nearly a decade Cox represented corporations for the Latham firm, which has counted the accounting firm Arthur Andersen LLP and Merrill Lynch & Co. among its clients. Cox also spent two years as a senior associate White House counsel in the Reagan administration, where he handled budget and international issues.

The appointment comes in the same week the U.S. Supreme Court reversed Arthur Andersen's obstruction-of-justice conviction resulting from its work for client Enron Corp. and as an Alabama jury continues to deliberate in a trial of a former health care executive accused of violating a new corporate accountability law known as Sarbanes-Oxley.

In selecting Cox, the administration chose a candidate whose background is far different from his predecessor's. William H. Donaldson, who said he will leave the agency June 30, was a Wall Street titan pressed into service toward the end of a long, distinguished career as an investment banker and head of the New York Stock Exchange, immune to pressure to earn a living after he left government.

"I'm trying to go back in my memory to think about when the last time a sitting politician was nominated to lead the SEC," said Duke University law professor James D. Cox, who is not related to the congressman.

Plaintiff lawyer William S. Lerach, who bitterly fought Cox on the securities litigation law in the mid-1990s, said the appointment "is like putting the fox in the chicken coop."

But Peter J. Wallison, a former White House counsel who supervised Cox, called him "the kind of person who would correct a lot of [missteps] the Donaldson commission made." Wallison said Cox "would be driven by data instead of adopting regulations because they seemed like a good idea."


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