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April
3, 2014
U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission
100 F Street, NE
Washington, DC
20549-2736
Via email
to: chairmanoffice@sec.gov
Re: Shareholder Proposals
Rule Change
Dear Commissioners:
As a small
shareholder having had ten human rights proposals voted in recent years[1], I am
writing you to express my grave concerns of the recent reports on shareholder
proposals rule change attempts[2],
especially of “Remarks at the 26th Annual Corporate
Law Institute, Tulane University Law School: Federal Preemption of State
Corporate Governance” by Commissioner Daniel M. Gallagher in New Orleans, LA on
March 27, 2014[3]. As reported by New York
Times “S.E.C. Official Criticizes Proxy Proposals on Social Issues” (MARCH
27, 2014), there is a high tide attempting to destroy the only effective democratic
element in current American economic system for corporate governance and social
responsibility.
In his remarks, Commissioner Gallagher starts “II.
Shareholder Proposals” with: “One area where the SEC’s incursions into
corporate governance have had a particularly negative effect is shareholder proposals.” It is a shock to read: “Activist investors
and corporate gadflies have used these loose rules to hijack the shareholder
proposal system.” If submitting a
non-biding proposal, even without the guaranty to be voted at a shareholders
meeting, is to hijack the shareholder proposal system, we can say that Gadfly Socrates
“hijacked” the Athenian democratic society, and another gadfly Jesus “hijacked”
the western civilization. I was accused
so when I pushed my human rights proposal to News Corp. shareholders meeting in
October 2010 [4], just before the company’s
human rights scandals became known to the public.
Commissioner Gallagher
states that “the vast majority of proposals are brought by individuals or
institutions with idiosyncratic and often political agendas that are often
unrelated to, or in conflict with, the interests of other shareholders.” He certainly has the right to express his
view points, as a shareholder, but as a commissioner, he has no right to
deprive shareholders of the right to submit and vote on social issues,
especially in our time of globalization when most publicly traded companies are
exposed to international social issues.
We shareholders know better how to defend our long-term interests for
ourselves and the society.
Commissioner Gallagher continues: “The low level of hedge fund activism
here implies that their concerns with corporate management are being addressed
using avenues other than shareholder proposals—as most legitimate concerns can
be.” This clearly indicates whom Commissioner
Gallagher represents, because hedge fund activism
never showed any interest in social issues. When a hedge fund with 5% shares could demand
three board seats and replace the CEO but my proposal with 32% support could
not change the company’s unethical human rights policy, Commissioner
Gallagher concerns that hedge fund money is not
powerful enough.
Commissioner Gallagher further says, “of course, where management is
breaching its fiduciary duties, investors can have recourse to the courts.”
This “see you in court” strategy (for corporation[5]) effectively excludes any possibility for
small shareholders without million dollars, such as me, a political refugee
from China and Japan, to participate, assist and help American corporate
improving governance and social responsibility, especially when they are doing
business outside of the U.S.
Commissioner Gallagher reveals his stance: “I’m not sure we need
shareholder proposals at all.” It is
very alarming that such a commissioner stays in the SEC for years to destroy social
justice when more and more of people’s life is affected by corporate policy and
practice globally.
Commissioner Gallagher further complains: “It
is enormously expensive for companies to manage shareholder proposals.” However, from my experience, it is the
company management who abused the company resource to hire outside law firms to
exclude my human rights proposals with materially false and misleading
statement. And Commissioner
Gallagher did not say one word about the “enormously expensive” CEO pay in theU.S.and the
world.
Commissioner Gallagher raises the point of his remarks, “the holding requirement to submit proxies should be updated.
$2,000 is absurdly low, and was not subject to meaningful economic
analysis when adopted. The threshold should be substantially more, by
orders of magnitude: perhaps $200,000 or even better, $2 million.” “I
would support banning proposal by proxy.” Again, this absurd nonsense just indicates
whom Commissioner Gallagher serves for inside the SEC. As a shareholder, I would like
to suggest the threshold should be substantially less, say $1,000 or even
better, $100, to encourage more shareholders to participate economic democracy
so we can prevent more corporate scandals, crimes, and financial crisis. If American people have the rights and
opportunities to participate direct democracy in their economic life, there is
no need to occupy Wall Street.
By “ensuring that the proposals that make it onto the
proxy are brought by shareholders concerned first and foremost about the
company—and the value of their investments in that company—not their pet
projects”, Commissioner Gallagher treats social issues, such as UN Global Compact, pet projects. We have
to ask: what is the purpose to establish the SEC, and the federal government?
Near the end, Commissioner
Gallagher proposes that “companies shouldn’t have to go through the time
and expense of litigation to vindicate their substantive rights under our
rules. The burden to ensure that a submission is clear and factually
accurate should be placed on the proponent, not the company. I believe that
the Staff should take a more aggressive posture toward proponents that fail to
meet that burden.” If the SEC is
hijacked to serve the economic oligarchy only, the only way for ordinary
American people to express our social concerns is to protest in front of corporate
headquarters.[6]
Let’s act together to stop the
assault on American economic democracy.
Respectfully,
Jing Zhao,
Ph. D
President
of US-Japan-China Comparative Policy Research Institute
zhao.cpri@gmail.com
[1] Google, Chevron, Cisco, News
Corp. (2010), Yahoo (2011, 2013), HP, Goldman Sachs, Oracle (2013), Sohu.com
(2014). I also submitted proposals to Boeing, Intel, Microsoft, NetApp, and presented
some proposals on behalf of other shareholders.
[5] Especially, most publicly traded companies are
registered in corporate-friendlyDelaware, even though they do not have business inDelawareat all.
[6] Last year, I was forced to plan
hunger-strike in front of Y company for its policy and practice against Chinese
human rights movement.
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