Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
ICCR’s 2013 Proxy Follies
ICCR’s 2013 Proxy Follies
Jun 28, 2026 10:28 PM

As 2013 draws to a close, it’s time to inventory the year’s proxy resolutions introduced by the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility. ICCR, a group purportedly acting on religious principles and faith, is actually nothing more than a shareholder activist group engaged in the advancement of leftist causes at the expense of their fellow shareholders and the world’s poorest.

ICCR recently released its 2013 Annual Report. Its “2013 Proxy Season Recap” (pp. 16, 17) presents a snapshot of initiatives ICCR members pursued this past year. The foundations for several categories betray the left’s tenuous grasp of science and economics while, at the same time, displaying a perverse naiveté regarding the potential negative consequences of their respective crusades.

Fortunately, all the worst proposals failed. As noted previously, ICCR shareholder resolutions are drafted by Bruce Freed, president of the George Soros-funded Center for Political Accountability (CPA). Both Freed and ICCR boast huge successes for their resolutions, assertions that rely on extremely fuzzy methodology that excludes abstention votes.

For example, ICCR member Nathan Cummings Foundation submitted a shareholder resolution to Valero that would require disclosure of political and lobbying expenditures. According to ICCR, the NCF resolution garnered 42.8 percent shareholder support. However, this number is correct only insofar as ICCR counts votes for and against the resolution. Valero’s proxy statement notes that abstentions are to be counted. Herewith the raw numbers for the NCF resolution vote:

FOR: 150,770,372

AGAINST:200,847,970

ABSTAIN:55,976,260

BROKER NON-VOTES:60,276,728

Following Valero’s formula of dividing votes “for” by the total number of “present” votes results in 36.99 percent – a 6 percent difference from the ICCR and CPA calculations.

In addition to political expenditure and lobbying disclosures, ICCR submitted resolutions regarding such initiatives as global warming, hydraulic fracturing and genetically modified foods. In each instance, the percentage of votes ICCR claims in support of their initiatives appears only to reflect a percentage of actual yes/no votes while ignoring abstentions.

Let’s take a peek at how ICCR fared in each category – forgiving your writer a degree of schadenfreude at how each went down in flames – beginning with global warming:

Controlling global warming has e one of the most urgent issues of our time. A resolution calling for a report panies’ fugitive methane emissions won 38%, 35% and 21% at ONEOK, Spectra and Range Resources, respectively. A resolution asking ConocoPhillips to adopt GHG reduction goals won 29% of the vote. Stryker announced that it would begin conducting a GHG inventory and setting a reasonable baseline in order to adopt quantitative reduction goals. A resolution asking PNC Financial to assess the impact of its lending activities on GHG emissions won 22.8%.

ICCR fared somewhat better with hydraulic fracturing proposals:

Hydraulic fracturing is a controversial method of natural gas extraction due to its potentially deleterious impacts on munity water supplies. Shareholders sent Chevron and ExxonMobil resolutions asking them to report on how they were managing risk in their shale/fracking energy operations. Both resolutions won strong support, each achieving 30.2%.

The above begs whether 30 percent can be considered “strong support.” And this on GMOs:

This year, ICCR members asked 7 corporations to consider labeling their GMO foods and seeds, and to report on the risks of GMOs. ICCR withdrew 3 resolutions after reaching agreement (Dow, ConAgra, Pepsi). Pepsi agreed to acknowledge its dialogue with ICCR on GM foods in its 2013 proxy, mitted to seeking ICCR input on the issue of labeling. ConAgra agreed to make a public statement on GMOs on its website.

Lobbying expenditures:

ICCR members have been seeking increased transparency around corporate lobbying, and withdrew 8 of their resolutions (3M, AT&T, Bristol-Myers Squibb, CCA, PepsiCo, Reynolds American, Wells Fargo, Xcel) this year after reaching agreements. Lobbying resolutions were big winners this year with 16 garnering 25% or higher, and one AlliantTechsystems – winning nearly 65%.

I never took a statistics course in college, and if I did the best conceivable e on any test would be a dismal 65 percent. Furthermore, pany at 65 percent may represent a victory, but celebrating “16 garnering 25% or higher” seems delusional. Finally, political contributions:

Post the 2010 Citizens United ruling, transparency around corporate political spending has e a major issue for investors. ICCR members withdrew 4 resolutions this year (CenturyLink, JPMorgan Chase, Mylan, Wellcare) in exchange for agreements panies to be more transparent about their political spending activities. Five resolutions (AT&T, Danaher, Dentsply, Hess, Spectra) won 25% or more of the vote. One hybrid Valero resolution addressing both contributions and lobbying won an impressive 42.8%

Forty-two percent is “impressive”? In the words of John Stossel: “Gimme a break.”

In conclusion, ICCR members submitted 221 shareholder resolutions at panies in 2013. Seventy-eight resolutions were withdrawn – ICCR’s website attributes this to “most as a result of agreements negotiated with management” without providing any supporting data for the “most” claim – and most if not all of the remainder failed either on their merits or other shareholders abstaining from voting against ICCR’s leftist resolutions. One can anticipate ICCR remains undeterred for the 2014 proxy season, and will persist in their wrongheaded drive to squander corporate resources at the expense pany profits, shareholder dividends, pensation and the financially disadvantaged who will experience higher costs as a result. More’s the pity.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The University of Austin is scaring all the right people
Whether the new university “dedicated to the unfettered pursuit of truth” will succeed is anyone’s guess. The real issue is why so many are trashing it before it even starts. Read More… Conservatives tend to be skeptical of the uses of the word diversity, but they love variety. They believe that American higher education is better when you have a rich choice among schools—uniformity being a feature of progressive ideologies—that each has a particular mission and identity. Such variety serves...
Hong Kong drops 62 places in “press freedom” by country
The effects of the National Security Law are being felt by journalists in Hong Kong, as the city suffers a terrible slide into a totalist state to match China’s. Read More… Reporters Without Borders (RSF) released this year’s World Press Freedom Index, ranking countries based on press freedom, from the most to the least press. In 2002, for example, Hong Kong was ranked 18th. This year, it fell to 80th out of 180 countries, while China landed at #177, only...
Hong Kong high court initiates final stages of Next Digital’s demise
The pany, founded by entrepreneur and pro-democracy advocate Jimmy Lai, is in its death throes, another victim of the draconian National Security Law. Read More… A Hong Kong high court has ordered the winding-up of Jimmy Lai’s prominent pany, Next Digital, following a local government petition. The order came from high court master Jack Wong Kin-tong on Dec. 15. No representatives from Next Digital were present at the hearing and pany submitted no objections, according to South China Morning Post....
Advent lifts the veil of judgment and mercy in the divine economy
Christians in the marketplace are motivated by more than profit. They seek also to be worthy of the public trust so as to avoid divine judgment. Read More… One of the more disturbing aspects of the way the market economy works is the ability of, at least some, participants to avoid responsibility for their decisions and actions. The manner in which this works is through the concepts of corporate personality and limited liability. The corporation is deemed to have a...
Pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai wins one in court, as Hong Kong prosecutor’s appeal is denied
In 2020, entrepreneur and Apple Daily publisher Jimmy Lai beat back an attempt to prosecute him for “intimidating” a pro-Beijing reporter during a Tiananmen Square Massacre vigil. The prosecution appealed, and has now lost, even as Lai remains in prison convicted on other charges. Read More… Hong Kong prosecutors lost their appeal against a magistrate’s decision in September 2020 that cleared charges against media tycoon Jimmy Lai on “intimidating a reporter from a rival newspaper,” according to the South China...
Christmas in Connecticut: the holiday movie that promises you can’t have it all
Can a cynical newspaperwoman and a WWII vet live happily ever after a PR stunt? Read More… I continue my series on old Hollywood Christmas movies. After a movie about church as munity, The Bishop’s Wife(1947), and the workplace as munity, The Shop Around the Corner (1940), I turn to a movie about family, the smallest but most munity: Christmas in Connecticut (1945), starring Barbara Stanwyck, one of the great Hollywood stars, Sydney Greenstreet (the Fat Man from The Maltese...
Inflation is real and we’re experiencing the costs and consequences
Don’t believe that increasing the money supply or jacking up federal spending costs nothing. Blaming corporate greed for rising prices is just a diversion from poor economic policy. Read More… Generally, the topic of inflation is considered dry and uninteresting, but it is one that has garnered much attention and debate over the past year. There peting narratives as to what inflation is and why it matters, and even whether the U.S. economy is experiencing inflation or not. Inflation is...
This Advent, the Christmas child calls you and me
Mary’s call and response is a powerful reminder of how Advent calls us to model her in humble obedience and service, whatever our vocation. Read More… We arrive at the Christmas stable. We have prepared. The Christ child e to us—Immanuel. We begin by taking a step back. The candle that is lit for the final Sunday of Advent reminds us of Mary, the one who brings the Lord into the world. The Protestant Reformers reacted against Catholic overemphasis on...
Take recent polls about COVID hastening the demise of American religion with a grain of salt
Recent polls suggest church attendance and religious affiliation are declining at an even faster pace than before. But who exactly is answering these poll questions, and how do they understand them? Read More… The latest Pew Research Center survey on American religion reflects a familiar trend in recent years: declining levels of Christian affiliation and growing numbers of religiously unaffiliated (the “nones”). Almost 30% of those surveyed told Pew that they identify with no particular pared to 16% in 2007....
The American family needs a Miracle on 34th Street now
The ultimate Christmas classic has proved over time to be both prophetic and bitterly realistic. Read More… My Christmas movies series has hitherto considered church (The Bishop’s Wife), work (The Shop Around the Corner), and family (Christmas in Connecticut), munities that constitute America. I’ll conclude with the most famous American Christmas fairy tale of all, Miracle on 34th Street (1947), in which merce, and even marriage are all in trouble, as they are today. The story is straightforward but unpredictable:...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved