Shareholder Proposal on Chief Executive Officer’s Compensation Resolved: shareholders recommend that Comcast Corporation (our Company) reduce the CEO pay ratio by 25% - 50%. Supporting Statement Section 953(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act directed the SEC to amend Item 402 of Regulation S-K to require each company to disclose the annual total compensation of the CEO, the median of the annual total compensation of all employees (except the CEO), and the ratio of these two amounts (CEO pay ratio). According to our Company’s 2019 Notice of Annual Meeting of Shareholders, the annual total compensation of our CEO is $35,041,029, the median of the annual total compensation of all employees (except the CEO) is $82,205, and the CEO pay ratio is 426:1 (p.65). The CEO pay ratio was even higher (458:1) in 2017 (2018 Notice of Annual Meeting of Shareholders p.66). What is the justification of such a high ratio? Amazon’s CEO pay ratio is 58:1 in 2018. Did our Company perform seven to eight times better than Amazon? Mr. Brian Roberts has been our President since 1990, has been our CEO since 2002, and has been our Chairman of the Board since 2004. He had sole voting power over 1/3 of the combined voting power of our two classes of voting common stock (p.19) because his ownership of our Company’s class B common stock has 100-to-1 absurd voting power. Power concentration for so long without term limit is very bad, and should not be abused to concentrate wealth in our Company. How much is the U.S. President compensated? Nationwide, “Median compensation for 132 chief executives of S&P 500 companies reached $12.4 million in 2018, up from $11.7 million for the same group in 2017, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis.” (March 17, 2019). “CEOs rake in 940% more than 40 years ago, while average workers earn 12% more” (CBSNEWS August 14, 2019). America’s ballooning executive compensation is not sustainable for the economy. It is time for American executives as citizens to take the social responsibility on their own initiative rather than to be forced to do so by the public. See ‘Passive Income’ to ‘Two Cents’: How Elizabeth Warren Honed Her Message, Wall Street Journal October 4, 2019.
|