|
||||
|
Categories:
|
HOT TOPIC: Proxy Season 2008 Discussion, Proxy Season Hot Topic, Definition, News, Debate, Articles – Accountability CentralIntroduction to 2008 Proxy Season Hot TopicProxy Season 2008 Introduced February 2008 Over the past 40 years, much has changed in the American Society. Think of the critical year 1968 – a cultural revolution took place, many of us will agree, and for many institutions, life would never be the same as in “the good old days of top-down, autocratic rule.” The Old Order was challenged by the New as the [now] elders of the Baby Boom generation (born after 1946 and in their late-teens and early 20s in 1968) demanded their say. They stormed the college CEOs office, disrupted the Democratic Party convention in Chicago, burned draft cards, shredded military uniforms and awards (as disillusioned draftees returned from Vietnam), demanded equal rights (if female), and during the ongoing Civil Rights struggles mounted serious challenges to the political status quo everywhere in the American Society. Greater democracy, or at least greater public participation and say-so in decision-making and less autocratic rule, we could claim, were among the changes that had come to: (1) government at all levels; the political process; elections; (2) colleges and universities (which abandoned in locus parentis wholesale); (3) the military, to a large degree (as the young officers returning from Southeast Asia including Colin Powell vowed to change the way the military conducted its wars); (4) the political nominating process (no more smoke-filled backrooms, or big city bosses shoving aside individual voters; primaries would be vigorous and open); (5) religious / faith-based organizations (remember the reforms of Vatican II?); (6) media – journalism (many more individuals challenged their editors and publishers); also, boundaries would be pushed (think of Penthouse magazine); (7) public schools (woe to the teacher who strikes a child today); (8) the workplace (female CEOs? African-American board members? Heresy in 1967); And more. We could argue that the activism and idealism of the late-1960s is still creating evolutionary change in virtually all of our public institutions. But an increasing army of shareowners are now focused on the last holdout – the public corporation – where democracy lags and there is growing resistance in Corporate America on the part of boards and executives in responding to demands for more “corporate democracy.” Especially when it comes to board nominations and elections, and shareholder-sponsored resolutions to change polices, practices, strategies, and so on. 2008 could well be another cataclysmic year in terms of challenges to the elites. Professors Berle and Means spelled this out more than seven decades ago – as “agents” of ownership took command of the executive tower, and board rooms (CEOs and boards being agents of the shareowners) the separation of owner – manager in large companies would essentially mean many benefits of “control” would accrue to the management team. (See our background document on this at: http://www.accountability-central.com/single-view-default/article/background-perspective-on-the-nature-of-shareholder-activism/Berle%2C%20Means/?tx_ttnews%5BbackPid%5D=21&cHash=792247ff34 What does all this mean to us in the 2008 proxy season? Plenty – we could be moving into a year similar to 1968, with all of its social, political, financial, cultural, and capital markets upheavals. And the battleground, the very public debate arena will be the dozens, even hundreds of proxy voting contests being conducted across a wide spectrum of issues, concerns and shareowner focal points in the United States – including challenges from faith-based investors; traditional corporate governance reformers; mainstream public employee pension funds; mutual funds; social investors…and more! There is a considerable amount of news, commentary and research on shareowner activism, proxy contests past, investor focal points, management resistance to encroaching “corporate democracy,” public sector response, institutional investor initiatives…and more…in sections and subsections of Accountability Central. The purpose of this Hot Topic focus is to package the 2008 campaigns in one easy-to-reference section. We’re interested in your points-of-view and activities during the 2008 campaigns. Please send information to: editors@accountability-central.com. The Editors |
Latest on 2008 Proxy SeasonJanuary 25, 2008 NIRI Finds Companies Split on Notice and Access Adoption for 2008Source:National Investor Relations InstituteMany organizations await lessons from early adopters who are driven to the new rules by expected cost savings [more] January 25, 2008 SEC Green Lights An Unprecedented Shareholder Proposal; Proposal asks Fidelity to make its funds genocide-freeSource:Investors Against GenocideAgainst Genocide – Draw the line at investing in genocide. Boston, MA -- Shareholders of Fidelity’s Contra Fund will soon have the opportunity to vote on a shareholder proposal which asks the mutual fund giant to ensure that...[more] January 23, 2008 Is Your 401K Funding Genocide? New organization asks individuals to demand that mutual fund companies become genocide-free
Source:Investors Against Genocide
Investors Against Genocide -- Draw the line at investing in genocide[more] December 12, 2007 LIUNA Achieves Victory in Aggressive Effort on Behalf of Shareholders, Workers and HomeownersSource:(CSRwire)In Precedent-Setting Ruling, SEC Requires Beazer Homes to Place a LIUNA Proposal Seeking Full Disclosure of Its Mortgage and Housing Market Investments on its Proxy Statement for Shareholder Consideration[more] December 12, 2007 Shareholder Proposal Revisits Fiduciary Duty at Agribusiness Goliath, MonsantoSource:(CSRwire)NAPA,CA - December 11, 2007 - Harrington Investments, Inc., (HII) a socially responsible investment advisory firm, has announced the introduction of a binding amendment to Monsanto Corporation's corporate bylaws that could bar...[more] December 3, 2007 Proxy Access: Was Long Island Care a Deception?
December 3, 2007 By Jim McRichie During his testimony before the Senate Banking Committee on Nov. 14, Cox said the AFSCME v AIG decision “applies only in one of the 12 judicial circuits in America. And it has created...[more] November 29, 2007 Cisco "Say on Pay" Shareholder Resolution Wins Strong 48% SupportSource:Interfaith Center on Corporate ResponsibilitSAN JOSE, CA.///November 15, 2007///At the annual meeting of shareholders, almost half (48 percent) of Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO) shares voted were cast in support of a "say on pay" proxy resolution asking the leading U.S. high-tech...[more] November 20, 2007 Top U.S., International Investors Urge Sec to Table Proposed Rollback of Shareowner Rights
Source:CalPERS
SACRAMENTO, CA – Eight leading U.S. and international pension funds, owning more than $300 billion in U.S. stocks, urged federal regulators today to withdraw a proposed take-away of shareowners’ use of corporate ballots to...[more] November 16, 2007 Fidelity shift in 2007 proxy season tips scales toward corporate political disclosureSource:Center for Political AccountabilityWashington, D.C. - In an important development, top funds in Fidelity, one of the nation's leading mutual fund families, moved from opposing to abstaining on shareholder resolutions calling for corporate political transparency...[more] November 15, 2007 CalPERS Urges U.S. Senate Committee to Protect Shareowner Access to Corporate Election BallotsSource:CalPERSSeeks Strong Message to SEC About Proposed Rule Change[more] |
| HOME | ABOUT THE SITE | REGISTRATION INFORMATION | ADVERTISING OPPORTUNITIES | SPECIAL SECTIONS | |||
|
|||
|
|||