C OR P OR AT E C A M PA I G N S P E N D I N G :
G I V I N G S H A R E HOL D E R S A V OI C E
Ciara Torres-Spelliscy
Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law
ABOUT THE BRENNAN CENTER FOR JUSTICE
he Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law is a non-partisan public policy and
law institute that focuses on fundamental issues of democracy and justice. Our work ranges
from voting rights to redistricting reform, from access to the courts to presidential power in
the ight against terrorism. A singular institution – part think tank, part public interest law
irm, part advocacy group – the Brennan Center combines scholarship, legislative and legal
advocacy, and communications to win meaningful, measureable change in the public sector.
ABOUT THE BRENNAN CENTER’S
CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM PROJECT
Campaign inance laws can be crafted to promote more open, honest, and accountable
government and to bring the constitutional ideal of political equality closer to reality. he
Brennan Center supports disclosure requirements that inform voters about potential inluences on elected oicials, contribution limits that mitigate the real and perceived inluence
of donors on those oicials, and public funding that preserves the signiicance of voters’
voices in the political process. he Brennan Center defends federal, state, and local campaign
inance and public inance laws in court and gives legal guidance and support to state and
local campaign inance reformers through informative publications and testimony in support
of reform proposals.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
he author would like to thank Karl J. Sandstrom, Bruce Freed and Professors Adam
Winkler, Daniel Greenwood and Robert Mutch for reviewing a draft of the longer academic
work which serves as the basis of this report, the Brennan Center’s Director of the Democracy Program Susan Liss, Chief Counsel Frederick A.O. Schwarz, Jr., Counsel Monica Youn,
Kelly Williams, and Mimi Marziani for their editorial suggestions, research assistants Vijay
Das and Ali Hassan, undergraduate intern Sarah Nadler, legal interns Laura Kilian, Cheryl
Isaac, Andrew Gehl, Roshni Chaudhari, Patricia Soung, and Cristina Gallo who helped
research this piece. he Brennan Center thanks the Democracy Alliance Partners, the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the JEHT Foundation, the Joyce Foundation, the Open Society Institute, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, and the Wallace Global Fund for the generous
support that made this report possible. he statements made and the views expressed in this
report are solely the responsibility of the Brennan Center.
© 2010. his paper is covered by the Creative Commons “Attribution-No Derivs-NonCommercial”
license (http://creativecommons.org). It may be reproduced in its entirety as long as the Brennan Center
for Justice is credited, a link to the Center’s web page is provided, and no change is imposed. he paper
may not be reproduced in part or altered in form, or if a fee is charged, without the Center’s permission.
Please let the Brennan Center for Justice know if you reprint.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Ciara Torres-Spelliscy is Counsel for the Democracy Program at the Brennan Center, working on
campaign inance reform and fair courts. Ms. Torres-Spelliscy earned her B.A. magna cum laude
from Harvard. She earned her J.D. from Columbia Law School. She is the co-author along with
Ari Weisbard of What Albany Could Learn from New York City: A Model of Meaningful Campaign
Finance Reform in Action, 1 Albany Gov’t L.R. 194 (2008); Electoral Competition and Low Contribution Limits (2009) with co-authors Kahlil Williams and Dr. homas Stratmann; and Improving Judicial Diversity (2008) with co-authors Monique Chase and Emma Greenman, which was
republished by hompson West Reuters in Women and the Law (2009), as well as author of Corporate
Political Spending & Shareholders’ Rights: Why the U.S. Should Adopt the British Approach (forthcoming 2010). She has been published in the New York Law Journal, Roll Call, Business Week,
Forbes, he Root.com, Salon.com, CNN.com and the ABA Judges Journal. She has also been
quoted by the media in he Economist, he National Journal, Sirius Radio and NPR. She provides
constitutional and legislative guidance to lawmakers who are drafting bills. Before joining the
Center, she worked as a corporate associate at the law irm of Arnold & Porter LLP and was a staf
member of Senator Richard Durbin.
Brennan Center for Justice | 1
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Foreword
3
Executive Summary
4
Introduction: he Proper Role of Corporate Money in our Democratic Process
5
Chapter I: he Legal Landscape After Citizens United
7
Chapter II: he Problems with Corporate Political Spending
8
Chapter III: he British Model
16
Chapter IV: Policy Proposal - Suggested Changes to U.S. Securities Law
21
Appendix A: British/American Companies Reporting American Political Spending 24
Appendix B: A Summary of the Shareholder’s Rights Act
25
Endnotes
27
2 | Brennan Center for Justice
FOREWORD
In Citizens United, decided January 21, 2010, the U.S. Supreme Court gave an unequivocal green
light for corporate money in elections, by outlawing under the First Amendment, laws that limit
corporate spending in elections. his radical decision overturned more than 100 years of settled
law. While it is diicult to know how distorting an efect on our democratic electoral processes this
decision will have, it is reasonable to expect a signiicant increase in corporate expenditures.
Corporate law is ill-prepared for this new age of corporate political spending by publicly- traded
companies. Today, corporate managers need not disclose to their investors – individuals, mutual
funds, or institutional investors such as government or union pension funds – how funds from
the corporate treasury are being spent, either before or after the fact. And the law does not require
corporate managers to seek shareholder authorization before making political expenditures with
corporate funds.
his report proposes changes in corporate law to adapt to the post-Citizens United reality. Two
speciic reforms are suggested: irst, require managers to report corporate political spending directly to shareholders, and second, require managers to obtain authorization from shareholders
before making political expenditures with corporate treasury funds. Modeled on existing British
law, these changes will ensure that shareholders’ funds are used for political spending only if that is
how the shareholders want their money spent.
his report represents the irst of several proposed “ixes” to the damage done to American democracy by the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision. he Brennan Center will also be releasing
proposals to develop public funding systems that build on grassroots participation with matching
funds. We will also be working to develop an alternative constitutional paradigm to the disastrous
and radical view of the First Amendment adopted by a conservative majority of the Supreme
Court. We will also continue working to repair voter registration systems through federal legislation that could bring millions more voters onto the registration rolls and reduce fraud and abuse.
If our democratic system is permitted to be overrun with corporate spending, we can expect increased public cynicism about our institutions of government and further erosion in the public’s
trust in our democratic system.
Susan M. Liss
Director, Democracy Program
Brennan Center for Justice
Brennan Center for Justice | 3
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
he Supreme Court has radically altered the legal landscape for politics with the 5-4 decision
in the case Citizens United v. FEC, handed down on January 21, 2010. Turning back decades of
statutory law, the Court has elevated the First Amendment rights of corporations to speak during elections, and has created a new paradigm for how political campaigns may be funded. he
way that corporations “speak” is by spending money, usually to purchase advertisements that
most individuals could not aford to inance.
Now that the Court has held that publicly-traded corporations have the same First Amendment
protections as individuals, limitations on Congress’ ability to regulate their spending will be severely constrained. hat means that corporate treasury money–including the funds invested by
individuals, mutual funds, pension funds and other institutional investors–can be spent on politics without alerting investors either before or after the fact. Under current laws regulating corporations, there is nothing that requires corporations to disclose to shareholders whether funds
are being used to fund politicians or ballot measures, or how the political money is being spent.
Moreover, shareholders have no opportunity to consent to the political use of corporate funds.
his does not have to be the case. Britain has an alterative approach. In the U.K., companies
disclose past political expenditures directly to shareholders. And more importantly, shareholders must authorize corporate political spending before a corporation uses shareholder funds on
political spending.
his report argues for the United States to change its securities laws in the wake of Citizens
United to
(1) provide notice to shareholders of any and all corporate political spending and
(2) to require shareholder authorization of future corporate political spending.
4 | Brennan Center for Justice
INTRODUCTION
The Proper Role of Corporate Money
in our Democratic Process
In Citizens United, the U.S. Supreme Court majority determined that the First Amendment protects the use of corporate money in elections.1 Roughly half of American households own stocks, many through mutual funds or 401(k) retirement accounts.2 “Corporate money” in a publicly traded company is in part made up of investments from
shareholders. hus, corporate spending is in reality the spending of investors’ money.3
Political spending by corporations may raise the democratic problem of corruption or
the appearance of corruption. For shareholders, the risk of corporate political spending
attaches to the pocketbook.4 Recent studies have shown that corporate political expenditures are symptomatic of problems with corporate governance and long-term performance.
While these studies show correlation (and not causation) between political spending and
poor irm performance,5 it is worthy of worry that political spending may be indicative
of risky corporate behavior.6 Because of twin concerns about the protection of shareholders and the integrity of the political system, which may be corrupted by corporate
dollars, a century’s worth of American election
laws have prohibited corporate managers from
the Citizens United decision
spending a corporation’s general treasury funds
means that corpor ations can
in federal elections.7 hese prophylactic camspend corpor ate money to
paign inance laws8 have protected shareholder
directly support or oppose
interests by making corporate treasury funds
of-limits to managers who might be tempted
candidates in feder al elections,
to spend this corporate money to support a
as well as in all 50 states.
personal favorite on the ballot.
States’ corporate law and federal securities law–for the most part–do not address the
issues that will arise with the advent of unfettered corporate political spending by managers. For years, state courts enforcing state corporate laws have largely turned a blind
eye to managerial decisions to spend corporate money on politics.9 Using what is known
as the “business judgment rule,” state courts have allowed corporate managers to spend
corporate treasury money on politics. Before Citizens United, in all states, corporations
could use corporate treasury money on ballot measures, and in 28 states, corporations
could use corporate treasury money on candidate elections. Now, the Citizens United
decision means that corporations can spend corporate money to directly support or
oppose candidates in federal elections as well as in all 50 states. Yet under state corporate
law, there are no clear standards about what corporate political spending would or would
Brennan Center for Justice | 5
not be ultra vires or a waste of corporate assets. Furthermore, there are no federal or state
laws or regulations requiring boards to report such spending to shareholders or requiring
shareholders to approve political spending.
Should shareholders discover large or imprudent corporate political expenditures, they
have very little recourse under current law. A suit for breach of iduciary duty would
likely be in vain. Shareholders would be faced with two unsatisfying solutions: either
they could launch a costly campaign to vote out the board or they can sell their stock–
possibly at a loss. hus, under current U.S. law, shareholders cannot provide meaningful
oversight of managerial whims to spend shareholder investments on politics.
his report will briely lay out the issues presented by infusing corporate dollars into
American politics, including the way disclosure of corporate political spending falls into
a problematic regulatory gap between campaign inance law and corporate law, as well as
how state corporate law and federal securities law fail to protect shareholders from managers’ spending corporate dollars on elections.10 hen this report will explore how the
U.K. has approached the problem of corporate money in politics. Finally, this report will
ofer a concrete policy solution. Modeled on the British approach to corporate political spending, this report urges Congress to adopt a new law requiring publicly traded
companies to provide two basic protections for shareholders: disclosure of past corporate
political spending and consent to future corporate political spending.
6 | Brennan Center for Justice
CHAPTER 1. THE LEGAL LANDSCAPE
AFTER CITIZENS UNITED
Citizens United v. FEC, which was decided on January 21, 2010, has allowed corporate
treasury money into federal elections and elections in 22 states. Technically, Citizens United involved little more than a narrow question of administrative law: whether a 90-minute
ilm entitled “Hillary: the Movie,” which was highly critical of then-presidential candidate
Hillary Clinton, and partially funded by for-proit corporate money, was covered by the
elections law as a long-format, infomercial-style political ad.
But instead of focusing on this narrow question, the Supreme Court used Citizens United
to give corporations the same political First Amendment Rights that an American citizen
has. In doing so, the Court disturbed 63 years of law which barred corporate independent
expenditures at the federal level and over a century of laws preventing corporate expenditures at the state level. Citizens United has dismantled campaign inance safeguards which
used to address the problem of corporate managers using other people’s money in politics.
Before the Citizens United decision, pre-existing federal laws required corporate managers to make political expenditures via separate segregated funds (SSFs), also commonly
known as corporate political action committees (PACs), so that shareholders, oicers and
managers who wanted the corporation to advance a political agenda could designate funds
for that particular purpose. his scheme limited corporate inluence on elections since the
amount of funds that can be raised and contributed by PACs are subject to strict limits
(federal PACs can accept individual donations of $5,000 and can give a candidate $2,400
per election).
hese laws protected both
Citizens United has dismantled campaign
the integrity of the demfinance safeguards which used to address
ocratic process as well as
the problem of corpor ate managers using
shareholders. Recognizother people’s money in politics.
ing the wisdom of this
approach, as of 2010, 22
states had followed suit
with similar laws. In the 28 states that lacked federal-style election rules, corporations were
able to give political donations to candidates directly from their corporate treasuries and
they could make independent expenditures on behalf of such candidates using corporate
funds.11 his money could be used in such states to pay for expenditures in legislative,
executive and judicial elections, all without consent from or notice to shareholders. Now,
post-Citizens United, corporate money may be used by corporate managers to directly support or oppose candidates in all state and federal elections.
Brennan Center for Justice | 7
CHAPTER 2. THE PROBLEMS WITH
CORPOR ATE POLITICAL SPENDING
A. The Democratic Problem
he democratic problem posed by unfettered corporate political spending is the risk that
policymakers will base their legislative decisions on what’s best for corporations instead
of what’s best for citizens and voters. here is ample reason to be concerned that there
will be a new inlux of corporate cash into elections, given the recent history of corporate
political spending, and to worry about the impact on our democracy resulting from that
new inlux.
Despite the federal ban on the use of corporate treasury money to support or oppose
candidates, corporate money has made its way into the electoral process through several diferent avenues–and has inluenced elections for years. By any measure, corporate
money is frequently used to try to inluence ballot measures and to elect, re-elect and
unseat candidates at the state, federal and even international level.12
In the 2008 U.S. federal election, which was marked by a lengthy presidential primary
season, the grand total raised by all federal candidates was $3.2 billion. Money from corporate PACs comprised one out of every ten federal dollars contributed13 and corporate
PACs’ contributions to Congressional races were one of every three PAC contributions
between 1997 and 2008.14 Although this report is not focused on corporate PACs, but
rather on money that comes directly from corporate treasuries, it is nonetheless interesting to note since 2005, 173 corporate donors, “their Political Action Committees,
executives and other employees have contributed, under campaign inance law limits,
$180 million to federal candidates and political parties, an average of over $1 million
per organization.”15
Exactly how more corporate money in politics may afect American policy is hard to
predict. Following on the heels of Citizens United, one risk is that politicians may change
their behaviors based on real or perceived new threats of high corporate political spending.16 An open question is: will elected oicials refrain from supporting reforms that are
hostile to big corporate donors and instead favor policies dictated by corporate donors?17
And while it is diicult to document actual inluence over policy, it is possible the inlux
of corporate money may result in a public perception that the government is for sale to
the highest bidder, further damaging the public trust in our democratic system. It is this
perception of corruption that is corrosive to democratic norms.18
8 | Brennan Center for Justice
The difference between
a corporate PAC and the corporate treasury
A corporate PAC, or SSF, is a political action committee organized by a
corporation to gather money that will be used in elections. he corporate
PAC can solicit money from shareholders, executives, directors and certain high level employees and their families.19 Everyone who gives to the
corporate PAC does so voluntarily and is on notice that the money will be
used on politics. Individuals may give $5,000 to a SSF every year and may
give a maximum of $69,900 to all SSF, PACs and parties every two years.20
By contrast, corporate treasury money includes all the money from
the corporation’s business operations, and corporate treasury money
in publicly-traded companies includes all of the money invested by
shareholders.
B.
Other People’s Money
When managers of publicly-traded companies spend corporate treasury money on politics, they do so using other people’s money–in part, money invested by shareholders.21
Some studies have indicated that corporate contributions appear to be linked with windfalls for donating corporations.22 But the narrative of political spending as an unmitigated good is not the only one available. For example, a recent study of 12,000 irms
by Professors Aggarwal, Meschke, and Wang23 revealed that despite corporate managers’
attempts to inluence public policy through spending on elections, corporate political
spending correlates with lower shareholder value.24
Aggarwal and his co-authors suggest that high levels of political spending are a trademark of poor corporate management, and that “managers willing to squander small
sums on political giving are likely to squander larger sums elsewhere.”25 Consequently,
one potential risk posed by deregulation of corporate money in politics is that corporate
managers who were restrained by the PAC requirement will spend much more money on
politics—using the corporate treasury to support their personal political agendas.26 Now
that the Supreme Court has given its imprimatur to corporate political spending, new
protections need to be implemented to protect shareholders from managers’ potentially
proligate spending on politics.
Brennan Center for Justice | 9
he Center for Political Accountability (CPA) has also done case studies of corporate
political contributions linked to irm failure. he CPA found:
Enron, Global Crossing, WorldCom, Qwest and Westar Energy each made
corporate contributions a key part of their business strategies, enabling them
to avoid oversight, engage in alleged illegal activities and gain uncharacteristic
advantage in the marketplace–the combination of which led to their ignominious downfall at the expense of their shareholders.27
Enron, Global Crossing and WorldCom ended up in bankruptcy–at the time, these were
among the biggest bankruptcies in U.S. history;28 Qwest and Westar Energy came perilously close to bankruptcy.29
Furthermore, shareholders’ own First Amendment interests could be trampled if their
investments are used to support candidates and causes that they do not wish to endorse.
As the European Corporate Governance Service explains:
his is exactly why partisan political donations are such a bad idea for companies. Shareholders’ views of which, if any, political party’s program[] will
beneit them most will vary dramatically. And many may conclude that any
political expenditure is a waste of their money. he danger is… that shareholders’ views are actually overlooked and management decides for itself to position
the company as politically partisan. And this in turn may lead to reputational
damage…. he safest option for both companies and shareholders is simply to
avoid these types of corporate donations altogether.30
1. Poor Disclosure of Corporate Political Spending
According to Justice Kennedy, writing the lead opinion in Citizens United, the free low
of information empowers shareholders to protect their own interests. As Kennedy wrote,
“[s]hareholder objections raised through the procedures of corporate democracy can be
more efective today because modern technology makes disclosures rapid and informative.”31
Unfortunately, this assumption that there is readily available information about corporate
political spending appears to be based on a misunderstanding of the state of the law.
As U.S. law stands now, corporate managers can spend corporate money on politics without notifying shareholders either before or after the fact and they can make this political
spending without any authorization from shareholders.32 his is problematic because
the political interests of managers and shareholders can and do diverge.33 Unfortunately,
currently, neither corporate law nor campaign inance law provides shareholders with
accessible salient information about the total universe of corporate political spending.
10 | Brennan Center for Justice
a. Campaign Finance Law Reporting
Campaign inance disclosure laws vary from the federal to state level as well as from state
to state. Corporate political spending can be underreported because the duty to report
often falls on the candidate or party receiving the money and not the corporation giving
the money. Furthermore, as will be discussed below, many states and the FEC simply
have weak reporting requirements that do not capture the ways modern corporations
spend money on politics.
As U.S. law stands now, corpor ate
he Federal Election Commission (FEC)
requires reporting from candidates,
managers can spend corpor ate
political committees and parties. Corpomoney on politics without notifyrate SSFs report their spending directly
ing shareholders either before or
to the FEC.34 To track contributions
after the fact and they can make
by SSFs at the federal level, the public
this political spending without any
must know the exact names of the SSFs
authorization from shareholders.
involved. Tracking spending becomes
diicult when an SSF does not contain
the “doing-business-as” name of the corporation at issue. A common tactic is for the corporate SSFs to give to benign sounding
PACs which, in turn, give directly to federal candidates. For example, the Abraham
Lincoln Leadership Political Action Committee, the Democracy Believers PAC, and the
Freedom and Democracy Fund are largely funded by corporate SSFs.35
Federal spending is only one subset of political spending. Post-Citizens United, corporations
may directly support or oppose candidates in every state election. And even before Citizens
United, corporations could spend money on ballot initiatives in all 50 states. Spending in
state elections is reported in that state, and not to a central location like the FEC. Each
state has its own distinct disclosure requirements with its own deinitional loopholes.
Reporting political expenditures under state campaign inance laws is particularly spotty,
creating many opportunities for corporations to conceal their role underwriting politics. While most corporate political spending is technically reportable to state regulators
(again, often by the candidate and not by the corporation), state laws are porous and
may not capture the full universe of political spending. As the Campaign Disclosure
Project has demonstrated, year after year, states fail to achieve meaningful disclosure or
accessible databases.36 To reconstruct the total amount of reported political spending,
shareholders would have to comb through vast volumes of records at the federal and state
level37—and perhaps even at the international level—to learn how much and to whom
corporations contribute.38
Brennan Center for Justice | 11
Some political spending falls under the radar, so no matter how much due diligence a
shareholder does, the spending remains unknown. For example, trade associations, such
as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, do not divulge the identity of those funding their
political activities and most corporations do not divulge how much they have given to
trade associations.39 Increasingly, corporations are making anonymous contributions to
trade associations and other tax-exempt organizations which are becoming “proxies for
corporate political involvement.”40
b. Corporate Law Reporting
Federal securities law also fails to require that shareholders receive information regarding corporate political spending. he Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has
no rule or regulation requiring disclosure by publicly-traded companies of their political
spending to shareholders or the investing public. Even for the political spending that
is properly reported to a government agency, there is no legal duty to share this information directly with shareholders in an accessible way, such as in a Form 10-K annual
report. Because political spending by corporate entities is not disclosed in a single place,
discovering the full extent of the political spending of any corporate entity takes copious
research, to the extent that such spending is discoverable at all.
he problem of lack of full transparency of political spending is not a novel one. In the
aftermath of Watergate, Congressional hearings and SEC investigations revealed that
300 American corporations had made questionable or illegal payments both domestically and to foreign governments—including campaign contributions. he result of
these revelations resulted in the SEC’s requiring voluntary disclosure by corporations of
questionable foreign political payments and in Congress’ passing the Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act.41 In a speech supporting the passage of the legislation, then-SEC Commissioner John R. Evans argued for the need for transparency and the risk posed to the
soundness of the inancial markets:
Disclosures of illegal or questionable payments in connection with business
transactions raises serious questions as to the degree of competition with respect to price and quality because signiicant amounts of business appear to be
awarded not to the most eicient competitor, but to the one willing to provide
the greatest personal economic rewards to decisionmakers. Such disclosures…
also raise questions regarding the quality and integrity of professional corporate
managers and whether they are fulilling their obligations to their boards of
directors, shareholders, and the general public.42
While the Watergate-era revelations included out-and-out bribes, many of the same
concerns raised by Commissioner Evans echo today as shareholders often know very
12 | Brennan Center for Justice
little about the beneiciaries of corporate political expenditures made
by corporate managers and any ensuing risks.43 Furthermore, shareholders
may unwittingly fund political spending at odds with their own political
philosophies.44 As Professor Jill Fisch
has explained:
This basic asymmetry of information
between a corpor ation and its beneficial owners needs to be addressed by
changing feder al securities laws to
better inform shareholders.
Political contributions are generally not disclosed to the board or shareholders,
nor are political expenditures generally subject to oversight as part of a corporation’s internal controls. he lack of oversight makes it diicult for corporate
decision makers and stakeholders to evaluate the costs and beneits of political
activity.45
With boards in the dark about corporate political spending, shareholders have little
hope of fully understanding the scope of companies’ political expenditures.46 his basic
asymmetry of information between a corporation and its beneicial owners needs to be
addressed by changing federal securities laws to better inform shareholders. As a leading
corporate law irm advocated in a public memorandum:
Shareholders have legitimate interests in information about corporate policies
and practices with respect to social and environmental issues such as climate
change, sustainability, labor relations and political contributions. hese issues,
many of which do not fall neatly within a line item disclosure requirement,
bear on the company’s reputation as a good corporate citizen and consequently,
the perceived integrity of management and the board.47
2. The Lack of Shareholder Consent
In the Citizens United decision, Justice Kennedy, writing for the 5-4 majority, brushed
aside the need for shareholders’ protection because there was “little evidence of abuse that
cannot be corrected by shareholders through the procedures of corporate democracy.”48
However, as will be discussed below, there are serious limitations to what shareholders
can do in response to corporate political spending, especially for undisclosed spending.
One troublesome problem is that even if political expenditures are disclosed, the law
does not require any meaningful shareholder consent to corporate political spending. In
contrast to money that is given to a corporate PAC expressly for use in politics, shareholders do not generally invest in a corporation with the intent to make political statements.49 In fact, investor’s money is being spent on politics without any requirement for
explicit permission or authorization from shareholders.
Brennan Center for Justice | 13
State-based corporate law today does not adequately address the issue of managers’ use
of corporate money in politics. he 103 years of regulating corporate political money
through the federal election laws has left a system of norms which are ill-suited for the
new era ushered in by the Citizens United decision, when corporate treasury money will
be widely available for large-scale political expenditures.
In fact, state courts have allowed corporate political spending under the business judgment rule. Instead of inding that such spending is ultra vires or a waste of corporate
assets, so far, courts have used the permissive “business judgment rule” to allow corporate
managers to spend corporate money on politics without meaningful restrictions.50 hus,
shareholder suits alleging a violation of the board’s iduciary duty because of corporate
political spending are likely in vain. Professor homas Joo elucidates:
Shareholders must allege corruption or conduct approaching recklessness in
order to even state a claim challenging management actions. his principle of
deference is not limited to decisions regarding ‘business,’ narrowly deined.
Courts have applied business judgment deference to…political spending on
the ground that management may believe such decisions will indirectly advance
the corporation’s business.51
Now that the Supreme Court has stripped away the campaign inance protections requiring that corporations directly support or oppose candidates only through PACs, fundamental changes that would result in more internal corporate controls of political spending are needed.52 One of those new internal controls should require managers to seek
authorization from shareholders before making political expenditures with corporate
treasury money under the U.S. securities laws.
Some have argued that market discipline alone will prevent a corpoA better system is one in which
ration from spending an excessive
the shareholders know about the
amount on politics. For instance, at
spending and authorize it before it
the Citizens United oral argument,
leaves the corpor ation’s coffers.
Chief Justice John Roberts asked the
Solicitor General Elena Kagan, “can’t
[shareholders] sell their shares” if
they object to particular political spending by a given corporation?53 But the theoretical
ability to exit an investment is not a real solution to this problem. First, the ability to sell
is highly constrained for many investors if they own their shares though an intermediary
like a pension fund or a 401k that is invested in mutual fund. In that case, the choice to
divest from the individual shares lies with the fund manager. he only way a beneicial
14 | Brennan Center for Justice
owner who holds stock through a fund can be sure they are not invested in an ofending
stock is by divesting from the fund entirely. Such actions may trigger adverse tax consequences and penalties.
Moreover, even for those who do own stocks directly, selling shares after a corporation has
made an ill-advised or large political expenditure provides little remedy to the shareholder.
he corporate money has already been spent, never to return to the corporate treasury,
potentially delating shareholder value. A better system is one in which the shareholders
know about the spending and authorize it before it leaves the corporation’s cofers.
Brennan Center for Justice | 15
CHAPTER 3. THE BRITISH MODEL
he current American model where corporate money lows into the political system
through obscured channels need not be the norm. here is another way—the British
system. he British provide a useful and elegant legislative model that the United States
should emulate now that the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision has overturned
the federal law banning the use of corporate treasury funds for electioneering. he U.K.
allows direct corporate donations54 to candidates and political parties, yet it does so with
much more transparency.55 In 2000, the U.K. adopted an amendment to its Companies
Act, which requires British companies to disclose political contributions to its shareholders as well as to seek consent from shareholders before political donations are made.56
Like the U.S., the U.K. has had its share of campaign inance scandals. As a researcher
at the House of Commons explained the history of political funding before the 2000
U.K. reforms:
he main objections to the [pre-2000] system, where party inances are largely
free from any statutory regulation, revolve around suspicions that inancial considerations can buy undue inluence and improper access. …here is now a great
deal of support for more openness and transparency in the system. Among the
issues perceived as causing most concern are: large donations from individuals
and companies, and, more speciically, the correlation between donations and
access to Ministers, inluence on policy, favourable commercial considerations,
and the receipt of honours or other personal appointments…57
hese atmospherics contributed to the sense that reform was needed in the U.K. However, the 2000 changes in British law came about as a direct response to the Fifth Report
of the Committee on Standards in Public Life.58 Lord Neill, who chaired the Committee, explained the need for the new approach:
Many members of the public believe that the policies of the major political parties have been inluenced by large donors, while ignorance about the sources of
funding has fostered suspicion. We are, therefore, convinced that a fundamentally new framework is needed to provide public conidence for the future, to
meet the needs of modern politics and to bring the United Kingdom into line
with best practice in other mature democracies.59
Consequently, the Committee recommended that a company wishing to make a donation to a political party should have the prior authority of its shareholders.60 his reform
was adopted by Parliament.
16 | Brennan Center for Justice
British law requires if a company has made a political donation of over £2,000, then
the directors’ annual report to the shareholders must include the name of who received
the donation and the donation amount.61 In England, the directors’ report is equivalent
to a company’s 10-K annual report in the United States and £2,000 is roughly equal to
$3,000 at current exchange rates.62
In addition to requiring disclosure, the British law goes further and requires shareholder
consent for spending over £5,000 on political expenditures.63 At current exchange rates,
£5,000 is roughly $8,000. If shareholders in British companies do not approve a political
donation resolution, then the company cannot make political contributions during the
relevant period.64 Also, directors of British companies who make unauthorized political
donations are personally liable to the company for the amount spent plus interest, and
must compensate the company for any loss or damage as a result of the unauthorized
donation or expenditure.65 he interest rate charged on unauthorized political expenditures is 8% per annum.66
How the British System Works
British shareholders do not approve each and every individual political
donation. Instead the managers ask for a political budget for a year or
longer for a certain amount of money (say £100,000). Shareholders then
give an up or down vote. If management loses the vote, then managers
cannot spend the money without subjecting themselves to liability.
In fact, British companies with American businesses actually report their American
political expenditures to their British shareholders under the Companies Act.67 British
irms are among some of the biggest corporate donors in U.S. elections.68 For a sample
of such irms, please see Appendix A. hus, harmonizing American law with British law
would not require any additional data gathering for companies which are already reporting American giving in the U.K.
Brennan Center for Justice | 17
A. The Apparent Drop in Corporate Political Expenditures
he efect of these legal changes in the Companies Act on the political behavior of British companies should be a matter of future study by political scientists. One British
newspaper reported in 2008, “U.K. political donations, once commonplace for listed
blue-chip companies, have almost disappeared ....”69 he publicly-available data on preand post-2000 corporate political spending in the U.K. is incomplete. he available data
show that, both before and after the reform, most corporate money went to the Conservative Party.70 he Labour Party has historically received substantially less corporate
monies.71 For example, during the 1995-1996 iscal year, there were only three corporate
donations to the Labour Party totaling £98,000.72 In contrast, that year, the Conservative Party received approximately £2.7 million from 145 companies.73 Similarly, for the
1997-1998 iscal year, there were 120 corporate donations worth a total of £2.88 million to the Conservative Party.74 After the reforms, the total company donations to the
Conservatives fell to £1.74 million in 2001 and £1.16 million in 2003.75
To be sure, not every British company has foregone large political expenditures.76 Overall, however, spending by individual companies appears to have dropped after the 2000
reforms. A study of corporate donations from 1987-1988 showed 28 companies that
had given £50,000 or more.77 In contrast, a recent sampling of the biggest U.K. irms
reveals that many of the same irms which used to give at the £50,000 level have decided
to forego political spending altogether. Others are spending more modest amounts.78
However, it should be clear that the choice of British companies to spend corporate
monies in U.K. elections is irmly in the hands of the managers, once they have received
shareholders’ approval. As will be discussed below, nearly every resolution seeking shareholder approval of corporate political spending is approved. Whether the company goes
on to use authorized corporate funds on politics is management’s decision. Many British
companies are choosing not to spend on politics even after gaining clear authorization
from shareholders.
B. U.K. Proxy Votes to Authorize
British Political Spending
he Brennan Center partnered with the Pensions and Investment Research Consultants
Limited (PIRC), an independent British research and advisory irm that provides data
on corporate governance to institutional investors, to gather a data set of proxy votes
authorizing political spending by irms subject to the Companies Act. he data from
PIRC includes resolutions dating back to January 1, 2002 for over 150 companies subject to the Companies Act—a total of 638 shareholder resolutions authorizing political
corporate spending in eight years.
18 | Brennan Center for Justice
he PIRC data reveals that most British companies seeking authorization from their
shareholders under the Companies Act seek modest political budgets ranging from
£12,000 to £250,000 for a year or longer.79 here were a few exceptions. For example,
BP (formerly known as British Petroleum) sought and was granted an authorization for
£400,000 for itself and an additional £400,000 for BP International Limited over a four
year period.80 British American Tobacco sought and was granted an authorization for
£1 million over a four year period,81 but these were outliers.
C. Disclosure of U.K. Corporate Political Spending
In terms of recent political spending, companies gave detailed accounts of how the money
had been spent.82 For example, ITV PLC made detailed accounts, reporting “[d]uring
the year the Group made the following
payments totalling £7,968 (2007: £9,110):
A review of the recent annual
Labour Party £3,920; Conservative Party
£685; Liberal Democrat Party £2,086 and
reports by top British firms
83
Plaid Cymru Party £1,277.”
reveals that many companies are
refr aining from political
Most companies asked for a general authorspending and have a stated policy
ity from their shareholders to make politiagainst the pr actice.
cal expenditures in the U.K. and Europe.
However one company has indicated for
several years in a row which political party
it intended to beneit. Caledonia Investments PLC sought and was granted authorization to give £75,000 to the Conservative Party for two years.84
A review of the recent annual reports by top British irms reveals that many companies
are refraining from political spending and have a stated policy against the practice. For
example, British Airways states in its most recent annual report that:
We do not make political donations or incur political expenditure within the ordinary meaning of those words and have no intention of doing so. he amount
of political donations made and political expenditure incurred in the year to
March 31, 2009, was £nil (2008: £nil).85
Many irms shared this policy of not making political contributions. For example, HMV,
the music retailer, stated in its most recent annual report: “[i]t is Group policy not to
make donations to political parties or independent election candidates and therefore no
political donations were made during the period.”86 Burberry also shared this approach
noting, “[t]he Company made no political donations during the year in line with its
policy.”87
Brennan Center for Justice | 19
Some of the same irms which have policies against political donations nonetheless have
sought shareholder authorizations to avoid inadvertent violations of British law. As
GlaxoSmithKline explains:
GSK has adopted a global policy ending the provision of political contributions
in any market in which the company operates.…However, in order to protect
GSK from any inadvertent violation of the U.K. law (where political contributions are deined very broadly) GSK will continue to seek shareholder approval
for political contributions within the EU.88
Cadbury shared this precautionary approach:
he Company has a long standing policy of not making contributions to any
political party.…neither the Company, nor any of its subsidiaries, made any
donation to any registered party….However, the [U.K. Companies Act] contains very wide deinitions of what constitutes a political donation and political
expenditure. Accordingly, as a precautionary measure to protect the Company
…, approval will be sought at the 2009 AGM for the Company to make donations to political organisations …of £100,000.89
D. Resistance to U.K. Corporate Political Spending
While some British pension funds are categorically opposed to corporate political spending and state so in their explanations of their voting philosophies,90 shareholders generally approve the corporate political budgets requested by British irms.91
However, in at least one instance, shareholders have defeated a corporate political
budget.92 In 2004, for example, shareholders voted against a resolution to authorize
£1.25 million in political spending by BAA PLC. his resolution was proposed by
a shareholder who was angry at the revelation that BAA had given free airport parking passes to members of Parliament. he shareholder considered these free passes
to be political donations, and thus he sought shareholder approval of the value of
the passes.93 he shareholders voted against this authorization.94 It is not clear from
this vote whether shareholders agreed with the motives of the shareholder proposing
it or not. Nonetheless, after the shareholder vote, BAA stopped giving free passes to
Parliamentarians.95
he BAA example shows the beneits of transparency in empowering shareholders. When
a corporation spends a large sum on politics, shareholders can react to the disclosure by
deciding to limit such spending in the future. British shareholders, like those invested at
BAA, have this power, and so should investors in American companies.
20 | Brennan Center for Justice
POLICY PROPOSAL
CHAPTER 4.
SUGGESTED CHANGES TO U.S. SECURITIES LAW
he U.S. should adopt the British approach to political expenditures by
(1) requiring disclosure of political spending directly to shareholders,
(2) mandating that corporations obtain the consent of shareholders
before making political expenditures, and
(3) holding corporate directors personally liable for violations of these
policies.
his approach will empower shareholders to afect how their money is spent. It also may
preserve more corporate assets by limiting the spending of corporate money on political
expenditures. A section-by-section summary outlining one proposed legislative ix is attached as Appendix B.
As explained in Chapter 2, currently, the disclosure of corporate political spending is inconsistent, keeping shareholders in the dark about whether their investment money is
being used in politics. At the very least, Congress should require corporations to disclose
their political spending, as many top irms have already volunteered to do. At the urging
of the Center for Political Accountability, 70 companies, 48 of which
At the urging of the Center for
are in the S&P 100, have agreed to
Political Accountability, 70 companies,
disclose all of their political spending
48 of which are in the S&P 100, have
to shareholders.96
agreed to disclose all their
To be useful, disclosure of political
political spending to shareholders.
spending under this proposal should
be frequent enough to notify shareholders and the investing public of corporate spending habits, and yet with enough of a
time lag between reports so that corporations are not unduly burdened. To accommodate
these two competing goals, disclosure of political expenditures should occur quarterly to
coincide with company’s iling of its Form 10-Qs with SEC. Because the political disclosure will be contemporaneous with the 10-Q iling, transaction costs can be minimized.
he Brennan Center is not alone in calling for more transparency in corporate political
activity. he Center for Political Accountability,97 Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility,98 Common Cause,99 and the Nathan Cummings Foundation,100 to name just a few,
have all pushed for better disclosure of political spending by corporations.
Brennan Center for Justice | 21
But disclosure alone is not enough. Congress should act to protect shareholders by giving
them the power, under statute, to authorize political spending by corporations. he voting
mechanics would work in the following way: At the annual meeting of shareholders (a.k.a.,
the “AGM”), a corporation that wishes to make political expenditures in the coming year
should propose a resolution on political spending which articulates how much the company wishes to spend on politics.101 If the resolution gains the vote of the majority of the outstanding shares (50% plus 1 share), then
the resolution will be efective, and the
These proposed changes to U.S.
company will be able to spend corporate
securities law will provide
treasury funds on political matters in the
enhanced shareholder rights
amount speciied in the resolution. However, if the vote fails to garner the necesthrough greater tr ansparency of
sary majority, then the corporation must
corpor ate political spending and
refrain from political spending until the
will ensure that when corpor ashareholders airmatively vote in favor of
tions spend other people’s money on
a political budget for the company.
politics, that they do so with full
informed consent.
Finally, to ensure that this reform has
teeth, another aspect of British law should
be duplicated: personal director liability.
Directors of U.S. companies who make unauthorized political expenditures using company funds should be personally liable to the company for the unauthorized amount.
Our support for the British model is grounded in concerns about administration and transaction costs. A system which puts every political action of a corporation to a vote would be
costly and unwieldy to administer. By contrast, under this proposal, the corporation can
simply add an additional question (on authorization of the political budget) to the list of
items which are regularly subject to a shareholder vote at the annual meeting, alongside
such traditional matters as the election of the board of directors or appointing auditors.
In summary, to improve American corporate governance, the U.S. should change its securities laws to mirror current British law in this area, and should require publicly-traded
companies to:
(1) report their political spending directly to their shareholders on a periodic basis, and
(2) get shareholders’ authorization before spending corporate treasury funds on politics.
In addition,
(3) any unauthorized political spending should result in personal liability for directors.
22 | Brennan Center for Justice
hese changes should be made at a federal level to put all publicly-traded companies on an
equal playing ield.
Justice Kennedy’s opinion in Citizens United is correct that “transparency enables the electorate to make informed decisions and give proper weight to diferent speakers and messages.”102 But he was mistaken in thinking that the necessary transparency for shareholders
and the investing public is already in place.
hese proposed changes to U.S. securities law will provide enhanced shareholder rights
through greater transparency of corporate political spending, and will ensure that when
corporations spend other people’s money on politics, that they do so with full informed
consent. he net efect of similar laws in Britain appears to have curbed corporate political
spending. hese reforms could moderate the role of corporate money in American politics
in a post-Citizens United world.
Brennan Center for Justice | 23
APPENDIX A
Sample of British/American Companies Reporting
American Political Spending103
Company
Website
US Giving Disclosed
http://www.astrazeneca-annualre- 2006: $416,675
Astra-Zeneca
ports.com/2007/business_review/ 2007: $321,645
governance/other_matters.asp
2008: $815,838 by US entities “to state
http://www.astrazeneca-annualre- political party committees, campaign comports.com/2008/downloads/AZ_ mittees of various state candidates ailiated
AR08_Full.pdf (page 95)
with the major parties in accordance with
pre-established guidelines”
http://www.secinfo.com/d139r2. 2008: £319,000;
GlaxoSmithKline PLC
s3h.htm#n4au
2007: £249,000;
Glaxo discontinued political contributions
as of July 2009 but the GSK PAC continues
to give: in 2008 it gave £539,359 and in
2007 it gave £522,172.
http://www.lockheedmartin.com/in- Has PAC, gives soft money to Democratic
Lockheed Martin
vestor/corporate_governance/Politi- Governors Association & Republican GovcalDisclosures.html
ernors Association.
Total expenditures in 2008: $82,375.
http://www.exxonmobil.com/Cor- Corporate political contributions—U.S.
ExxonMobil
Corporation
porate/Imports/ccr2008/pdf/com- state campaigns and national 527s:
munity_ccr_2008.pdf
2005: $340,000
2006: $410,000
2007: $270,000
2008: $450,000
http://www.nationalgrid.com/an- 2006-07: $100,000 fr. National Grid;
National Grid
nualreports/2007/06_dir_reports/ $146,706 fr. National Grid PAC
dir_report.html ; http://www.nation- 2007-08: $70,000 fr. National Grid;
algrid.com/annualreports/2008/
$56,656 fr. PAC; Keyspan gave $37,015
http://www.nationalgrid.com/an- 2008-09: $180,000 fr. National Grid and
nualreports/2009/directors_reports/ subs to NYS PACs; $156,975 fr. National
index.html
24 | Brennan Center for Justice
Grid PACs
APPENDIX B
A Summary of the Shareholder’s Rights Act
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
his Act may be cited as the “Shareholder’s Rights Act of 2010”.
SECTION 2. FINDINGS AND DECLARATIONS.
Describes the need for shareholder authorization of corporate general treasury
funds for political expenditures.
SECTION 3. DEFINITIONS.
SECTION 4. SHAREHOLDER VOTE ON CORPORATE POLITICAL
ACTIVITIES.
Amends Section 14 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78n) by
adding at the end the following new subsection:
(1) ANNUAL VOTE – Requires that at an annual meeting of the shareholders there
must be a vote to authorize use of corporate general treasury funds for political
expenditures.
(2) SHAREHOLDER APPROVAL – Regulates the mechanism of seeking shareholders authorization for expenditures for political activities.
(3) DISCLOSURE OF SHAREHOLDER VOTES – Requires institutional investment managers subject to section 13(f ) of the Exchange Act to report at least
annually how they vote on any shareholder vote.
(4) DIRECTOR LIABILITY – Mandates that if a public corporation makes an unauthorized contribution or expenditure for a political activity, then the directors
are liable to repay to the corporation the amount of the unauthorized expenditure, with interest at the rate of eight percent per annum.
(5) RULEMAKING – Directs the Securities and Exchange Commission to issue inal
rules to implement this subsection not more than 6 months after the date of
the enactment of this Act.
Brennan Center for Justice | 25
SECTION 5. NOTIFICATION TO SHAREHOLDERS OF CORPORATE
POLITICAL ACTIVITIES.
Amends the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 to create standards for notiication
and disclosure to shareholders of corporate political activities. Requires and sets
standards for quarterly reporting by public corporations on contributions or expenditures for political activities. Requires that these quarterly reports be made
part of the public record; and a copy of the reports be posted for at least one year
on the corporation’s website.
SECTION 6. PUBLIC DISCLOSURE OF CORPORATE POLITICAL
ACTIVITIES BY THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION.
Amends Section 24 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 to regulate public disclosure of political activities by a public corporation to shareholders. Requires that
a quarterly report be iled under this subsection be iled in electronic form, in addition other iling forms. Directs the Securities Exchange Commission to make
the quarterly reports on political activities publicly available through the Securities
and Exchange Commission’s website in a manner that is searchable, sortable and
downloadable.
SECTION 7. REPORT BY THE OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET.
Directs the Oice of Management and Budget to audit compliance of public corporations with the requirements of this Act; as well as the efectiveness of the Securities Exchange Commission in meeting the reporting and disclosure requirements
of this Act.
SECTION 8. SEVERABILITY.
Provides that if any provision of this Act is ruled invalid, then the remainder of the
Act shall not be afected.
26 | Brennan Center for Justice
ENDNOTES
1.
Citizens United did not change the law on corporation contributions. Corporate
contributions to U.S. federal candidates remain banned. However, corporate
contributions to candidates are allowed in many state, local and international elections.
Citizens United permits unlimited corporate independent expenditures in federal and
state elections.
2.
See Joint Economic Committee, 106th cong., The Roots of Broadened Stock
Ownership I (2000), www.house.gov/jec/tax/stock/stock.pdf; Investment Company
Institute, U.S. Household Ownership of Mutual Funds in 2005, 2 (2005), http://www.
ici.org/pdf/fm-v14n5.pdf; The Investment Company Institute, 2009 Investment
Company Fact Book 8 (49th ed. 2009), http://www.icifactbook.org/pdf/2009_
factbook.pdf (“Households are the largest group of investors in [investment] funds, and
registered investment companies managed 19 percent of households’ inancial assets at
year-end 2008.”).
3.
his report is limited in scope and is focused on a subset of corporate entities:
publicly-traded corporations. his report does not address privately-held corporations,
partnerships or sole proprietorships. Furthermore, this report is focused on corporate
political spending. Here the phrase “political spending” is meant to include all spending
by publicly-traded corporations to inluence the outcome of any candidate election or
ballot measure, including contributions independent expenditures and funding any
electioneering communications. his includes contributions to intermediaries, such as
political action committees (PACs), trade associations or nonproits which are intended
to inluence the outcome of an election. “Political spending” does not include lobbying.
4.
Press Release, Center for Political Accountability, Shareholders See Risky Corporate Political
Behavior As hreat to Shareholder Value, Demand Reform, CPA Poll Finds, (April 5, 2006),
http://www.politicalaccountability.net/index.php?ht=a/GetDocumentAction/i/1267
(announcing a “poll found a striking 85 percent [of shareholders] agreed that the ‘lack
of transparency and oversight in corporate political activity encourages behavior’ that
threatens shareholder value. 94 percent supported disclosure and 84 percent backed
board oversight and approval of ‘all direct and indirect [company] political spending.’”).
5.
Bruce F. Freed & John C. Richardson, The Green Canary: Alerting Shareholders
and Protecting Their Investments (2005), http://www.politicalaccountability.net/
index.php?ht=a/GetDocumentAction/i/920; Rajesh Aggarwal, Felix Meschke, & Tracy
Wang, Corporate Political Contributions: Investment or Agency?, http://papers.ssrn.com/
sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=972670; Deniz Igan, Prachi Mishra, & hierry Tressel, A
Fistful of Dollars: Lobbying and the Financial Crisis, IMF Working Paper, 4 (2009), http://
www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2009/wp09287.pdf (“Our indings indicate that
lobbying [by inancial service corporations] is associated ex-ante with more risk-taking
and ex-post with worse performance… [a] source of moral hazard could be “shortBrennan Center for Justice | 27
termism”, whereby lenders lobby to create a regulatory environment that allows them exploit
short-term gains.”); see also Committee for Economic Development, Rebuilding Corporate
Leadership: How Directors Can Link Long-Term Performance with Public Goals (2009), http://
www.ced.org/images/library/reports/corporate_governance/cgpt3.pdf (“his report examines
how these eforts to build public trust and long-term value have coalesced to encourage
many large, global corporations to pay greater attention to their longer-term interests by
striking a balance between short-term commercial pursuits and such societal concerns as the
environment, labor standards, and human rights.”).
6.
Green Canary, supra note 5 at 14 (arguing “political contributions can serve as a warning
signal for corporate misconduct.”).
7.
See Marc Hager, Bodies Politic: he Progressive History of Organizational “Real Entity” heory,
50 U. Pitt L. Rev. 575, 639 (1989) (noting that concern over the role of corporations
in American democracy has a long vintage, arguing “[C]oncern with corporate power
over democratic processes in America grew sharply toward the close of the nineteenth
century as concentrations of private capital, in the form of corporations and trusts, reached
unprecedented size and power. hese huge pools of capital raised the frightening prospect
that candidates and elections might actually be bought in systematic fashion.”).
8.
See Daniel Greenwood, Essential Speech: Why Corporate Speech is Not Free, 83 Iowa L. Rev.
995, 1055 (1998), http://ssrn.com/abstract=794785 (“Corporate speech, then, should
be viewed with extreme suspicion. Corporate interference in the political sphere raises an
omnipresent specter of impropriety, of a valuable institution stepping out of its proper
sphere, of a tool of the people becoming its ruler.”).
9.
Claims for breach of iduciary duty are state law claims. See William Meade Fletcher,
Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Corporations § 840 (2009) (“he determination
of a director’s or oicer’s iduciary duty to the corporation and its shareholders is generally
governed by the law of the state of incorporation, unless under the circumstances the
corporation is deemed to be foreign in name only. In some jurisdictions, a statute articulates
the iduciary obligations of corporate directors and oicers to exercise their powers and
discharge their duties in good faith with a view to the interests of the corporation and of
the shareholders with that degree of diligence, care and skill that ordinarily prudent person
would exercise under similar circumstances in like positions.”).
10.
For a more in depth analysis of these issues, see Ciara Torres-Spelliscy, Corporate Political
Spending & Shareholders’ Rights: Why the U.S. Should Adopt the British Approach (2009),
http://www.brennancenter.org/content/resource/the_campaign_inance_case_for_
shareholder_protection/.
11.
See Robert S. Chirinko & Daniel J. Wilson, Can Lower Tax Rates Be Bought? Business RentSeeking and Tax Competition Among U.S. States, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Working Paper Series (Dec. 2009) (“During the 2003 to 2006 period, $1.5 billion, or nearly
$5 per capita, was contributed by the business sector…to candidates for state oices. Of this
28 | Brennan Center for Justice
$1.5 Billion, approximately 33% went to gubernatorial candidates (including lieutenant
governor candidates), another 33% to state senate candidates, 21% to state house
candidates, and the remaining 12% to candidates for other state oices (e.g., attorney
general, state judges).”) (However, this study did not distinguish between corporate PAC
and treasury spending.).
12.
See Center for Responsive Politics, Top National Donors Based on Combined
State and Federal Contributions, 2007-2008 (2010), http://www.opensecrets.
org/orgs/list_stfed.php?order=A (showing that top corporate donors gave at the federal
and state level); Lori Fisler Damrosch, Politics Across Borders: Nonintervention and
Nonforcible Inluence Over Domestic Afairs, 83 American J. of International L. 1, 24
(1989) (noting “a U.S.-incorporated, foreign-owned company’s PAC could serve as a
conduit for foreign funds to U.S. electoral campaigns.”); see also Electoral Commission,
Register of Donations to Political Parties (2010), http://registers.electoralcommission.
org.uk/regulatory-issues/regdpoliticalparties.cfm (listing American companies that had
contributed to British political parties such as Microsoft, Northern Trust, Kerr Mcgee
Oil, and Compaq Computers Ltd., among others).
13.
Center for Responsive Politics, 2008 Election Overview, http://www.opensecrets.
org/overview/index.php.
14.
U.S. Census, Table 415 Contributions to Congressional Campaigns by Political Action
Committees (PAC) by Type of Committee: 1997 to 2008, http://www.census.gov/
compendia/statab/2010/tables/10s0415.pdf (PAC contributions to Congressional
candidates were $387 million and $140 million were from Corporate PACs).
15.
Press Release, Campaign Finance Institute, Party Conventions’ Financiers Have Spent
Nearly $1.5 billion on Federal Campaign Contributions and Lobbying Since 2005 (Aug.
20, 2008), http://www.cinst.org/pr/prRelease.aspx?ReleaseID=203 (inding these same
donors also spent over $1.3 billion to lobby the federal government).
16.
Ruth Marcus, ‘Judicial Activism’ on Campaign Finance Law, Real Clear Politics, (Aug.
3, 2009), http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2009/08/03/judicial_activism_on_
campaign_inance_law_97746.html (arguing “[w]e don’t want Wal-Mart —at least
I don’t— using its purchasing power to buy elections, and we don’t want Wal-Mart
funneling money to a nonproit proxy.”).
17.
Greenwood, supra note 8, at 1055, (“When [corporate] money enters the political
system, it distorts the very regulatory pattern that ensures its own utility. When the pot
of money is allowed to inluence the rules by which it grows, it will grow faster, thus
increasing its ability to inluence—setting up a negative feedback cycle and assuring that
the political system will be distorted to allow corporations to evade the rules that make
them good for all of us (to extract rents, in the economists’ jargon.”).
Brennan Center for Justice | 29
18.
See McConnell v. FEC, 540 U.S. 93, 143-44 (2003) (“Of ‘almost equal’ importance has
been the Government’s interest in combating the appearance or perception of corruption
engendered by large campaign contributions. Take away Congress’ authority to regulate
the appearance of undue inluence and “the cynical assumption that large donors call the
tune could jeopardize the willingness of voters to take part in democratic governance.”)
(internal citations omitted).
19.
11 C.F.R. 100.6; Fed. Election Comm’n, SSFS and Nonconnected PACS (May
2008), http://www.fec.gov/pages/brochures/ssfvnonconnected.shtml.
20.
Fed. Election Comm’n, Contribution Limits for 2009-10 (2009), http://www.fec.
gov/info/contriblimits0910.pdf.
21.
See FEC v. Beaumont, 539 U.S. 146, 154 (2003) (explaining “the [corporate treasury
spending] ban has always done further duty in protecting ‘the individuals who have paid
money into a corporation or union for purposes other than the support of candidates
from having that money used to support political candidates to whom they may be
opposed.’”) (internal citations omitted).
22.
Nicole Albertson-Nuanes, Give to Get? Financial Institutions hat Made Hefty Campaign
Donations Score Big Bucks From he Government, 1 (Mar. 19, 2009), http://www.
followthemoney.org/press/Reports/GIVE_TO_GET_TARP_Recipients.pdf?PHPSESSI
D=fa738af7f3dba55d269db58a057e3f7a (noting 75 inancial institutions that received
TARP bailout funds had given contributions valued at $20.4 million to state level
candidates, party committees and ballot measure committees in all 50 states over the
7-year study period.); Chirinko & Wilson, supra note 11, at 3 (Finding “the economic
value of a $1 business campaign contribution in terms of lower state corporate taxes is
nearly $4.”).
23.
he Aggarwal study conforms with international studies of the relationships between
political connections and shareholder value. Mara Faccio, he Characteristics of Politically
Connected Firms (Oct. 2006) (inding in 47 countries, companies with political
connections underperform non-connected companies); Mara Faccio, Ronald Masulis
& John J. McConnell, Political Connections and Corporate Bailouts (Mar. 2005) (inding
in 35 countries politically-connected irms are signiicantly more likely to be bailed out
than similar non-connected irms); Paul K. Chaney, Mara Faccio & David Parsley, he
Quality of Accounting Information in Politically Connected Firms (Jun. 2008) (inding in
20 countries, quality of earnings reported by politically connected irms is signiicantly
poorer than that of similar non-connected irms.); and Marianne Bertrand, Francis
Kramarz, Antoinette Schoar & David hesmar, Politically Connected CEOs and Corporate
Outcomes: Evidence from France, 28 (2004) (In France “[w]e ind that irms managed by
[politically] connected CEOs have, if anything, lower rates of return on assets, than those
managed by non-connected CEOs.”).
30 | Brennan Center for Justice
24.
See Aggarwal et al., supra note 5, which included corporate treasury money spent on
politics pre-2002, the year McCain-Feingold was enacted closing the corporate softmoney loophole. Moreover, this study found that irms who make political donations
have lower excess returns in the year following an election than irms that did not donate
at all. Id. at 34 (revealing “[e]ven within the top ive donating industries, including
banking, inancial trading, and utilities that have undergone deregulation during our
sample period, donors have lower excess returns than non-donors.”). Excess returns
are deined as a irm’s one-year buy and hold returns minus their expected return for
the year as measured from the Wednesday following election day to the irst Monday
of November in the following year. Id. at 17. he study found that in the median
irm a $10,000 political donation is associated with a loss of $1.73 million. herefore,
Aggarwal and his co-authors conclude “shareholder value could be hurt by such wasteful
political spending.” Id. at 18; id. at 23 (inding “the more a irm donates, the lower
the excess returns.”); id. at 3-4 (stating “[g]iven the magnitude of the destruction of
shareholder value that we document, it is more plausibly the case that corporate political
contributions are symptomatic of wider agency problems in the irm.”).
25.
Id. at 39.
26.
Lance E. Lindblom, “he Price of Politics,” Pharmaceutical Executive, (October
2004) (“Some [corporate political] contributions are intended to support the industry
business model, while others simply back personal or managerial interests.”); see also the
webcast of a 2007 speech by Mr. Lindblom at Harvard available here: Andrew Tuch, he
Power of Proxies and Shareholder Resolutions, HLS Forum on Corporate Governance and
Financial Regulation (Oct. 19, 2007), http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/corpgov/2007/10/19/
the-power-of-proxies-and-shareholder-resolutions/.
27.
Green Canary, supra note 5, at 5.
28.
“Biggest Chapter 11 Cases,” CNBC (Sept. 17, 2008), http://www.cnbc.com/
id/26720522?slide=1; Al Hunt, “Enron’s One Good Return: Political Investments,”
Wall Street Journal, (Jan. 31, 2002) (arguing Enron “played with funny money. But
their political investment helped prolong the Ponzi scheme.”).
29.
“Qwest Isn’t As Hale As It Looks,” BusinessWeek (Feb. 6, 2006), http://www.
businessweek.com/magazine/content/06_06/b3970100.htm (“Four years ago, Qwest
Communications International Inc. was on bankruptcy’s doorstep”); “Executives Accused
of Plan to Loot Utility,” N.Y. Times (Dec. 5, 2003) (noting Westar was “pushed [] to the
brink of bankruptcy with $3 billion in debt”).
30.
European Corporate Governance Service, Blue-Wash (undated), http://www.ecgs.net/
news/story216.html.
31.
Citizens United v. FEC, No. 08-205, slip opinion at 55 (2010).
Brennan Center for Justice | 31
32.
Domini Social Investments, Social Impact Update Forth Quarter 2004 (2004) (“Despite
signiicant risks— to shareholder value and to the integrity of our political system —data
on corporate political contributions remains extremely diicult to obtain.”).
33.
See Adam Winkler, ‘Other People’s Money’: Corporations, Agency Costs, and Campaign
Finance Law, 92 Georgetown L. J. 871, 893-94 (June 2004); Jennifer S. Taub,
Able but Not Willing: the Failure of Mutual Fund Advisers to Advocate for Shareholders’
Rights, 34 J. of Corporation L. 101, 102 (2009), http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.
cfm?abstract_id=1066831 (“Approximately 77.7 million individuals in the United States
invest in equities through stock mutual funds.”); id. at 105 (“Investors who are the risktakers are now pushed further away from the decisionmakers, and the agency problem is
ampliied.”).
34.
Independent spending and funding of electioneering communications are also reported
to the FEC and the FCC, respectively. See Fed. Election Comm’n, Electronically
Filed Independent Expenditures (2009), http://fec.gov/inance/disclosure/ie_reports.
shtml; FCC, Electioneering Communications Database (ECD) (2009), http://
gullfoss2.fcc.gov/ecd/.
35.
Fed. Election Comm’n, Contributions Received by Abraham Lincoln Leadership
Political Action Committee, http://query.nictusa.com/cgi-bin/com_rcvd/C00357095/;
Contributions Received by Democracy Believers Political Action Committee, http://query.
nictusa.com/cgi-bin/com_rcvd/C00382036/; Contributions Received by Freedom &
Democracy Fund, http://query.nictusa.com/cgi-bin/com_rcvd/C00409987/.
36.
See Campaign Disclosure Project, Grading State Disclosure (2008), http://www.
campaigndisclosure.org/gradingstate/index.html.
37.
Jonathan Peterson, “More Firms’ Political Ties Put Online,” L.A. Times (Mar. 20, 2006),
http://articles.latimes.com/2006/mar/20/business/i-donate20 (“Campaign contributions
are a matter of public record, but getting a complete picture of a company’s political
giving is diicult because the donations can be scattered over scores of individual
campaign inance reports at the local, state and federal levels.”).
38.
Mutual Protection: Why Mutual Funds Should Embrace Disclosure of Corporate Political
Contributions/Common Cause and Center for Political Accountability, ALI-ABA Course
of Study Materials 11 (Dec. 2005).
39.
Bruce F. Freed & Jamie Carroll, Hidden Rivers: How Trade Associations Conceal
Corporate Political Spending 1 (2006), http://www.politicalaccountability.net/index.
php?ht=a/GetDocumentAction/i/932.
40.
Id. at 1-2 (“Trade associations are now signiicant channels for company political money
that runs into the tens if not hundreds of millions of dollars. In 2004, more than $100
million was spent by just six trade associations on political and lobbying activities,
32 | Brennan Center for Justice
including contributions to political committees and candidates. None of this spending is
required to be disclosed by the contributing corporations.”).
41.
S. Rep. No. 95-114, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 1977, 1977 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4098, 1977
WL 16144 (noting “Recent investigations by the SEC have revealed corrupt foreign
payments by over 300 U.S. companies involving hundreds of millions of dollars. hese
revelations have had severe adverse efects. Foreign governments friendly to the United
States in Japan, Italy, and the Netherlands have come under intense pressure from their
own people. he image of American democracy abroad has been tarnished. Conidence
in the inancial integrity of our corporations has been impaired. he eicient functioning
of our capital markets has been hampered.”).
42.
John R. Evans, “Of Boycotts and Bribery, and Corporate Accountability,” Securities
and Exchange Commission News, 9 (Oct. 5, 1976), http://www.sec.gov/news/
speech/1976/100576evans.pdf.
43.
Bruce F. Freed & John C. Richardson, Company Political Activity Requires Director
Oversight, ALI-ABA Course of Study Materials, 3 (Dec. 2005).
44.
Id. at 2-3; see also Victor Brudney, Business Corporations and Stockholders’ Rights under
the First Amendment, 91 Yale L. J. 235, 237 (1981) (stating “[t]he use of that wealth and
power by corporate management to move government toward goals that management
favors—with little or no formal consultation with investors—is also a phenomenon that
is generally undeniable.”); id. at 239-40 (noting “unless investor approval is obtained, the
funds of some investors are being used to support views they do not favor.”).
45.
Jill Fisch, he “Bad Man” Goes to Washington: he Efect of Political Inluence on Corporate
Duty, 75 Fordham L. Rev. 1593, 1613 (2006).
46.
he lack of board approval is the norm. However two states (Louisiana and Missouri)
do require board approval of political donations before they are made. See La. Rev. Stat.
Ann. §18:1505.2(F); Mo. Ann. Stat. §130.029.
47.
Ira M. Millstein, Holly J. Gregory & Rebecca C. Grapsas, Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP,
Rethinking Board and Shareholder Engagement in 2008 (January 2008), http://blogs.law.
harvard.edu/corpgov/iles/2008/01/gregory_millstein_corporate-governance-advisorymemo-jan-2008.pdf.
48.
Citizens United v. FEC, No. 08-205, slip opinion at 46 (2010) (internal citations
omitted).
49.
An earlier Supreme Court acknowledged that investment is distinct from political
engagement. FEC v. Massachusetts Citizens for Life, Inc., 479 U.S. 238, 257-58 (1986)
(citations omitted). (“he resources in the treasury of a business corporation, however,
are not an indication of popular support for the corporation’s political ideas. hey relect
instead the economically motivated decisions of investors and customers. he availability
Brennan Center for Justice | 33
of these resources may make a corporation a formidable political presence, even though
the power of the corporation may be no relection of the power of its ideas.”).
50.
Marsili v. Paciic Gas & Elec. Co., 51 Cal. App. 3d 313, 322 (Cal. Ct. App. 1975)
(characterizing a corporate political contribution as a good faith business decision under
the business judgment rule); Simon v. Sw. La. Elec. Membership Corp., 267 So.2d 757,
758-59 (La. Ct. App. 1972) (rejecting plaintif’s claim because nonproit corporation’s
political activities were illegal under state law rather than ultra vires).
51.
homas W. Joo, People of Color, Women, and the Public Corporation: Corporate Hierarchy
and Racial Justice, 79 St. John’s L. Rev. 955, 959 (2005) (citation omitted).
52.
Only Louisiana and Missouri corporations require board approval of political
expenditures. See supra note 46.
53.
Transcript of Re-argument at 57-59, Citizens United v. FEC, No. 08-205 (Sept. 9,
2009), http://www.supremecourtus.gov/oral_arguments/argument_transcripts/08205%5BReargued%5D.pdf
54.
Under British law political donations include: “(a) any gift to the party of money or
other property; (b) any sponsorship provided in relation to the party; (c) any subscription
or other fee paid for ailiation to, or membership of, the party; (d) any money spent
(otherwise than by or on behalf of the party) in paying any expenses incurred directly or
indirectly by the party; (e) any money lent to the party otherwise than on commercial
terms; (f ) the provision otherwise than on commercial terms of any property, services
or facilities for the use or beneit of the party (including the services of any person).”
Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act, c. 41 §§ 50 (2000), http://www.opsi.
gov.uk/Acts/acts2000/ukpga_20000041_en_1. And it goes without saying, Britain has a
Parliamentary system so donations typically go to political parties.
55.
Certain authors in Britain have argued corporations should not be able to make
political expenditures. Austin Mitchell & Prem Sikka, Association for Accountancy
& Business Affairs, Taming the Corporation (2005), visar.csustan.edu/aaba/
TamingtheCorporations.pdf. (arguing “[c]ompanies should be banned from making any
political donations to individual politicians or parties.”).
56.
Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act, supra note 54, c. 41 §§ 139, 140,
sched. 19; see also Explanatory Notes to Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act
(2000), c. 41, http://www.opsi.gov.uk/ACTS/acts2000/en/ukpgaen_20000041_en_1.
he Companies Act was amended again in 2006. As a result of the 2006 amendments,
donations to trade unions are exempt. In addition, directors are jointly and severally
liable for any unauthorized political expenditures plus interest. Companies Act c. 46, §§
369, 374 (2006), http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2006/pdf/ukpga_20060046_en.pdf;
see also Companies Act 2006 Regulatory Assessment (2007), http://www.berr.gov.uk/
iles/ile29937.pdf.
34 | Brennan Center for Justice
57.
Aileen Walker, Parliament and Constitution Centre House of Commons Library, he
Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Bill –Donations, 9 (Jan. 7, 2000), http://www.
parliament.uk/commons/lib/research/rp2000/rp00-002.pdf.
58.
Home Department, The Funding of Political Parties in the United Kingdom: The
Government’s Proposals for Legislation in Repsonse to the Fifth Report of the
Committee on Standards in Public Life 1999-2000, http://www.archive.oicialdocuments.co.uk/document/cm44/4413/4413-00.htm.
59.
Committee on Standards in Public Life, The Funding of Political Parties
in the United Kingdom, iii (1998), http://www.archive.oicial-documents.co.uk/
document/cm40/4057/volume-1/volume-1.pdf.
60.
Id. at 86.
61.
Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act, supra note 54; see also Electoral
Commission, Guidance to Companies: Political Donations and Lending (2007),
http://www.electoralcommission.org.uk/__data/assets/electoral_commission_pdf_
ile/0014/13703/Companies-Guidance-Final1_27776-20443__E__N__S__W__.pdf.
62.
he original reporting threshold in the 2000 law was £200. he amount was later
raised to £2,000 in 2007 under secondary legislation. See Department for Business
Enterprise & Regulatory Reform, Government Response to Consultation on
the Companies Act 2006 – Accounting and Reporting Regulations (2007), http://
www.berr.gov.uk/iles/ile40480.doc.
63.
Companies Act, supra note 56; see also Companies Act 2006: Explanatory Notes (2006),
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2006/en/ukpgaen_20060046_en.pdf.
64.
Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act, supra note 54.
65.
Companies Act, supra note 56, at § 369.
66.
he Companies (Interest Rate for Unauthorised Political Donation or Expenditure)
Regulations 2007, Statutory Instruments 2007 No. 2242 (July 25, 2007), http://www.
opsi.gov.uk/si/si2007/uksi_20072242_en_1.
67.
See e.g., AstraZeneca, Directors’ Report: Business Review: Corporate Governance: Other
Matters, http://www.astrazeneca-annualreports.com/2007/business_review/governance/
other_matters.asp (reporting “AstraZeneca’s US legal entities made contributions
amounting in aggregate to $321,645 (2006 $416,675) to state political party committees
and to campaign committees of various state candidates ailiated with the major
parties.”); National Grid, Directors’ Report for the Year Ended 31 March 2007 (May 16,
2007), http://www.nationalgrid.com/annualreports/2007/06_dir_reports/dir_report.
html (reporting “National Grid USA and certain subsidiaries made political donations
of $100,000 (£52,289) during the year. National Grid USA’s political action committees,
Brennan Center for Justice | 35
funded partly by voluntary employee contributions, gave $149,709 (£78,282) to political
and campaign committees in 2006/07.”).
68.
Stephanie Kirchgaessner, “BAE Among Top Foreign Donors to US Political Candidates,”
Financial Times, August 22, 2006 (noting “BAE, the British defence group, has
emerged as one of the most powerful corporate contributors to candidates in the current
US election cycle, ranking number 18 in a list of the biggest corporate donors.”); “U.S.
Elections Got More Foreign Cash—PAC’s of Overseas Companies Gave $2.3 Million in
1986 Congress Campaigns,” N.Y. Times, A27 (May 24, 1987).
69.
Patrick Hosking, “Business Big Shot: Peter Buckley of Caledonia Investments,” The
Times, (May 30, 2008), http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/movers_and_
shakers/article4029538.ece.
70.
Press Release, Labour Research Department, Tories Still Get Corporate Millions (June 2,
2001), http://www.lrd.org.uk/issue.php?pagid=1&issueid=362 (“he Conservative Party
has received a total of £1.74 million in company donations since the last election from 62
companies…just 12 corporate donations [went] to Labour totalling £191,500.”); Labour
Research Department, Party Funding, Labour Research 11 (Oct. 2003), http://www.
lrd.org.uk/db/downloads/lr0310.pdf (Companies gave £1,161,644 the Conservative
Party and £245,690 to the Labour Party in the 2002-2003 election cycle.).
71.
Lisa E. Klien, On the Brink of Reform: Political Party Funding in Britain, 31 Case W. Res.
J. Int’l L. 1, 13 (1999).
72.
Committee on Standards in Public Life, supra note 58 (noting £47,000 from the
Caparo Group, £30,000 from GLC Limited, and £21,000 from the Mirror Group for
the Labour Party.).
73.
Id. at 52, ¶ 597 (vol. 2 1998).
74.
Press Release, Labour Research Department, Tory Donations Take a Dive (Nov. 19, 1998),
http://www.lrd.org.uk/issue.php?pagid=1&issueid=330.
75.
See supra note 70.
76.
See he Co-operative Group, Annual Report and Accounts 2008, 36 (2008), http://www.
co-operative.coop/Corporate/PDFs/Annual_Report_2008.pdf (“In 2008 an annual
subscription of £476,000 (2007: £646,103) was made to the Co-operative Party.”).
77.
Michael Pinto-Duschinsky, British Party Funding 1913-87, Parliamentary Affairs,
April 1989, at 210 (listing as £50,000 or over donors: George Weston Holdings, British
& Commonwealth Holdings, Taylor Woodrow, Rugarth Investment Trust, Hanson
Trust, P & O, United Biscuits, Allied Lyons, Trafalgar House, Plessey, Whitbread,
Consolidated Goldields, Racal, Guardian Royal Exchange, Sun Alliance, Willis Faber,
36 | Brennan Center for Justice
Hambros, General Accident, Newarthill, Trust House Forte, Baring, British Airways,
General Electric, Glaxo Holdings, Rolls Royce, Royal Insurance, Unigate, and Williams
Holdings).
78.
See companies listed supra note 77 as £50,000 or over donors. But when these
companies are searched in the British Electoral Commission’s database of campaign
contributors from 2001-2009, only one donation from British Airways in 2001 for
£1,450 is listed. Electoral Commission, Register of Donations to Political Parties (2010),
http://registers.electoralcommission.org.uk/regulatory-issues/regdpoliticalparties.cfm.
79.
For example, the resolution passed at AstraZeneca stated the company could “make
donations to political parties; and make donations to political organisations other
than political parties; and incur political expenditure; not exceed[ing] $250,000…”
AstraZeneca, AstraZeneca Notice Of Annual General Meeting 2009 and Shareholders’
Circular, 6 (2009), http://www.astrazeneca.com/_mshost3690701/content/resources/
media/investors/2009-AGM/AZ_NoM_EN.pdf. Other companies had far more modest
political budgets. See e.g., 3i Group PLC, Notice of Annual General Meeting 2007, 2
(2007), http://www.3igroup.com/pdf/AGM_-_notice_of_AGM_2007.pdf (requesting
a political budget of £12,000 for a subsidiary); Balfour Beatty, Annual General Meeting
2009 and Separate Class Meeting of Preference Shareholders, 4 (2009), http://www.
balfourbeatty.com/bby/investors/shinfo/agm/2009/agm09.pdf (requesting a political
budget of £25,000 for the coming year).
80.
BP PLC, Notice of BP Annual General Meeting 2007, 10 (2007), http://www.bp.com/
liveassets/bp_internet/globalbp/STAGING/home_assets/IC_SHMV07_BP_notice_of_
meeting_2007.pdf.
81.
British American Tobacco, Annual General Meeting 2009, 5 (2009), http://www.bat.com/
group/sites/uk__3mnfen.nsf/vwPagesWebLive/DO57YMK7/$FILE/medMD7QJMDX.
pdf?openelement (“At its Annual General Meeting in April 2005, the Company was
given authority to make donations to EU political organisations and incur EU political
expenditure … for a period of four years and was subject to caps of £1 million on
donations to EU political organisations and £1 million on political expenditure during
that period.”).
82.
Northumbrian Water Group PLC, Notice of Annual General Meeting 2007, 2 (2007),
http://www.nwg.co.uk/agmnotice07.pdf (“Includ[ing] attending Party Conferences, as
these provide the best opportunity to meet a range of stakeholders, both national and
local, to explain our activities, as well as local meetings with MPs, MEPs and their agents.
he costs associated with these activities during 2006/07 were as follows: Labour £7,585,
Liberal Democrats £2,293, Conservative £2,303 [for a] Total £12,181.”).
83.
ITV PLC, Report and Accounts 2008, 44 (2008), 2008.itv.ar.ry.com/action/
printBasket/?sectionId=26443; see also Tesco PLC, Regulatory News, 30/06/2008, http://
Brennan Center for Justice | 37
www.tescoplc.com/plc/ir/rns/rnsitem?id=1214847200nRn3d9573X&t=popup_rns
(“During the year, the Group made contributions of £45,023 (2007 - £41,608) in the
form of sponsorship for political events: Labour Party £13,040; Liberal Democrat Party
£5,850; Conservative Party £5,786; Scottish Labour Party £500; Scottish National Party
£2,000; Fine Gael £1,397; Plaid Cymru £450; trade unions £16,000.).
84.
Caledonia Investments PLC, Letter from the Chairman and Notice of 2008 Annual General
Meeting, 9 (2008), http://www.caledonia.com/docs/AGM08.pdf; see also Caledonia
Investments PLC, Caledonia Investments plc: Results of Annual General Meeting, 1
(2008), http://www.caledonia.com/docs/Result%20of%20AGM%202008.pdf; Richard
Wachman, Caledonia Set for Revolt on Plan to Donate to the Tories, The Observer
(July 19, 2009), http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/jul/19/caledonia-investmentspolitical-donations-pirc.
85.
British Airways, 2008/09 Annual Report and Accounts, 57 (2009), http://www.
britishairways.com/cms/global/microsites/ba_reports0809/pdfs/BA_AR_2008_09.pdf.
86.
HMV Group PLC, Annual Report and Accounts 2009, 42 (2009), http://www.
hmvgroup.com/iles/1302/HMV_inal1.pdf.
87.
Burberry Group PLC, Annual Report 2008/09, 57 (2009), http://smartpdf.blacksunplc.
com/burberry2008-09ara/Burberry_2008-09_AnnualReport.pdf.
88.
GlaxoSmithKline, Political Contributions Policy, 2 (2009), http://www.gsk.com/about/
corp-gov/Policy-Political-Contributions.pdf.
89.
Cadbury PLC, Annual Report & Accounts 2008, 55 (2009), http://cadburyar2008.
production.investis.com/~/media/Files/C/cadbury-ar-2008/pdf/cadbury_ra_13mb_
compressed.ashx.
90.
See South Yorkshire Pensions Authority, South Yorkshire Pension Fund Corporate
Governance Policy: Voting Guidelines, 3 (2005), http://www.southyorks.gov.uk/
embedded_object.asp?docid=1397&doclib (stating the pension’s policy is to “[v]ote
against all resolutions to approve political donations as this is an inappropriate use of
shareholder funds.”); London Borough of Bexley Pension Fund, Statement of Investment
Principles, 35 (2008), http://www.yourpension.org.uk/Agencies/Bexley/docs/pdf/SIP%20
08.pdf. (stating “[i]t is inappropriate for a company to make such [political] donations.”);
London Borough of Sutton Pension Fund, Statement of Investment Principles, http://
www.sutton.gov.uk/CHttpHandler.ashx?id=876&p=0 (“We normally consider any
political donations to be a misuse of shareholders’ funds and will vote against resolutions
proposing them.”).
91.
See supra note 79; supra note 81.
92.
See West Midlands Pension Fund, Corporate Governance Proxy Voting Activity, 1-2
(2004), http://www.wmpfonline.com/pdfs/activity0604_0804.pdf .
38 | Brennan Center for Justice
93.
Ben Webster, Unhappy Landing for MPs’ Parking Perk, The Times (July 28, 2004)
https://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-1193813,00.html.
94.
Id.
95.
See BAA PLC, Annual Report 2004/05, 47 (2005), http://www.heathrowairport.com/
assets//B2CPortal/Static%20Files/BAAAnnualReport2004-05.pdf (“BAA no longer
provides free airport car parking passes for parliamentarians. he [passes were] not
renewed after the general election on 5 May 2005 following widespread consultation
with shareholders...”).
96.
Press Release, Center for Political Accountability, New Companies Bring Political
Disclosure to Nearly Half of Trendsetting S&P 100, http://www.politicalaccountability.net/
index.php?ht=a/GetDocumentAction/i/2636.
97.
Center for Political Accountability, “About Us,” http://www.politicalaccountability.net/
content.asp?contentid=406 (“Working with more than 20 shareholder advocates, the
CPA is the only group to directly engage companies to improve disclosure and oversight
of their political spending.”).
98.
Press Release, Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, Religious Investors Open
Campaign to Press Drug Companies to Disclose Political Spending (Dec. 9, 2004), http://
www.iccr.org/news/press_releases/2004/pr_contribs120904.htm.
99.
Susannah Goodman, Common Cause, Mutual Protection: Why Mutual Funds Should
Embrace Disclosure of Corporate Political Contributions (2005), http://www.commoncause.
org/atf/cf/%7BFB3C17E2-CDD1-4DF6-92BE-BD4429893665%7D/MUTUAL%20
FUND%20REPORT%202-15-05.PDF.
100.
Nathan Cummings Foundation, Shareholder Resolutions & Corporate Engagement 20032009, (undated), http://www.nathancummings.org/shareholders/shareholder_resolutions.
html.
101.
If particular candidates or ballot measures are known to the company at the time of the
AGM, then those particular candidates and ballot measures should be mentioned in the
language of the resolution.
102.
Citizens United v. FEC, No. 08-205, slip opinion at 55 (2010).
103.
he data in this chart comes from each company’s respective annual report.
Brennan Center for Justice | 39
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