Social networking meets governance

26 June 2009

Sarah Wilson

Latest News

Australia narrows climate reporting scope mid‑rollout

Minerva Proxy Update

Follow This challenges Shell days before key vote

SRD III is Europe’s chance to fix proxy plumbing

SEC Steps Closer to Unwinding Climate Disclosure Rules

Minerva Proxy Update

Featured Briefings

Australia Proxy Season Review 2025

2026 Proxy Season Preview

Diversity Divergence: Shareholders Steadfast Amid Pervasive Political Posturing

US investors angered by the meltdown in the US financial markets have a new resource to campaign for better governance. ShareOwners.org is a social networking site based on Ning, the community web tool  said to have played a central role in the success of President Obama's election campaign.

ShareOwners has some big names behind its campaign including Rich Ferlauto, director of corproate governance at AFSCME, John Wilcox of Sodali and governance author Nell Minnow. Initial funding for the site is coming from the Lens Foundation for Corporate Governance and a court settlement.

According to the group's mission statement, ShareOwners is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organisation aimed at educating and organising US investors to support financial market reforms. It's first objective is to engage US investors and encourage them to send their comments in support of the group's agenda directly to Congress. Over the longer term, the group has four broad objectives:

  • stronger regulation in form of a "beefed up SEC";
  • increased accountability of boards and CEOs;
  • improved financial transparency; and
  • protection of shareholders rights

Commenting on the launch of the site, Chairman Ferlauto said: "The severe losses suffered by tens of millions of Americans in their 401(k)s, mutual funds, traditional pension plans and other investments all point to the need for a new emphasis on shareowner rights and meaningful regulation. Our goal is to level the playing field by giving a powerful new voice to the people who comprise the 'silent majority' in the investment world."

 

One of the group's campaigns is to lobby the SEC to improve the integrity of proxy voting practices at US companies by ensuring that voting instructions entered on Broadridge's proxy vote platform accurately reflect shareholder's wishes. At present, any ballot fields left blank are automatically changed in favour of the board instead of being treated as abstentions. James McRitchie, the California-based publisher of  CorpGov.net submitted proposals to the SEC to change Rule 14a-4(b)(1) which regulates proxy voting practices. His proposal was originally filed in mid-May but is still open for comment.

 

To mark the launch of the site, ShareOwners have released the details of a survey of 1,256 US investors conducted by Opinion Research Corporation. The survey found that 79% of US investors wanted to see "strong action taken to correct the problems that exist today" in the financial markets. Full details of the results can be found on the site (see Links below).

Links

ShareOwners.org >>

SEC Blank Votes Rule Change Proposal >>

Related Stories

Minerva Analytics Files Texas Public Information Act Request as State Escalates Campaign Against Proxy Advisors

September 18, 2025

home

Read More

From Super-Voting to Equal Voting: Lyft’s Class B Share Conversion

September 12, 2025

Editor

Read More

The White House Loyalty Scorecard: Blurring the Lines Between State and Market

September 11, 2025

Editor

Read More

Stewardship Under Siege: Minerva CEO Criticises Regulatory Attacks on Proxy Advisors

June 24, 2025

Jack Grogan-Fenn

Read More

Climate Cutback: US EPA to Scrap GHG Emission Limits

June 13, 2025

Jack Grogan-Fenn

Read More

Congressional Democrats criticise banks for exiting climate coalitions

May 23, 2025

Elizabeth Pfeuti

Read More