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For IMMEDIATE RELEASE Tuesday, September 23, 2003 New Poll Shows Groundswell of Investor Support for Reforming Corporate Director Elections
WASHINGTON — Shareholders across the country want a stronger voice and a seat at the table when it comes to board of director elections, according to a Harris Interactive® survey released today by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), AFL-CIO. A strong majority of shareholders would support the adoption of new rules currently being drafted by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to allow shareholder-nominated directors to appear on publicly owned companies' proxy statements. "Shareholders — the actual owners of a corporation — almost never get the opportunity to nominate candidates to corporate boards. It is clear that individual investors want to see a strong proxy access rule that will give shareholders a meaningful choice in corporate board elections," AFSCME President Gerald W. McEntee said. According to McEntee, "The SEC needs to create an effective rule to open up the nominating process that currently silences shareholder voices and allows corporations to hand pick all directors. Now is the time to get corporate elections out of the back room and onto the proxy ballots where they belong." McEntee chairs the AFSCME Employees Pension Plan, the union's staff plan. Over one million AFSCME members nationwide participate in public employee pension plans with total assets of more than $1 trillion. The key findings of the Harris Interactive survey of more than 1,000 individual investors, show:
AFSCME thinks that the new rules being considered by the SEC should adhere to the following principles to be meaningful to individual and institutional shareholders:
The Views of Corporate Governance poll was commissioned by the AFSCME. The survey was conducted online within the United States between August 29 - September 2, 2003, among a nationwide cross section of 1,030 adults, aged 18 years and over, who own shares of stock in individual companies. Figures for age, sex, race, education, region and income were weighted where necessary to bring them into line with their actual proportions in the population. "Propensity score" weighting was also used to adjust for respondents' propensity to be online. This online survey is not a probability sample. RELATED DOCUMENTS:
### American Federation of State, County |
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