Under Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Rule 14a-8, public companies must include shareholder proposals in their proxy materials, provided proposal sponsors comply with the rule's eligibility and procedural requirements and the proposals do not fall within certain substantive grounds for exclusion. Shareholder proposals generally involve shareholder recommendations regarding corporate governance or environmental and social (E&S) issues raised by a company's operations. Rule 14a-8, often called the "shareholder proposal rule," has long been a source of debate. The rule's supporters tout it as a key tool in the shareholder rights movement and credit shareholder proposals with spurring valuable corporate governance reforms. Rule 14a-8's critics argue that many proposals seek to advance social and political agendas unrelated to shareholder value, creating costly distractions for corporate management.
The shareholder proposal rule is a component of the federal proxy rules, which require public companies to disclose various information to shareholders when soliciting proxies for shareholder meetings. The SEC has traditionally taken the view that state law allows shareholders to present certain types of proposals for a vote at annual meetings. Shareholder Proposals, 72 Fed. Reg. 43466, 43467 (Aug. 3, 2007). The SEC adopted the shareholder proposal rule in 1942 based on its conclusion that company proxy materials would be materially misleading if they omitted shareholder proposals of which management had notice. Jill E. Fisch, From Legitimacy to Logic: Reconstructing Proxy Regulation, 46 Vand. L. Rev. 1129, 1143–44 (1993). Companies that intend to exclude proposals for non-compliance with Rule 14a-8's eligibility, procedural, or substantive requirements must notify the SEC and explain the basis for the omission. 17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(j)(1) (2025). As a matter of practice, companies file these notifications along with requests for "no-action" letters from SEC staff—i.e., letters stating that SEC staff will not recommend an enforcement action if a company omits a proposal from its proxy materials. While no-action letters are not legally binding on any party, they play a key practical role in determining which proposals proceed to a shareholder vote.
As of this writing, the shareholder proposal rule may be approaching an inflection point. In an October 2025 speech, SEC Chairman Paul Atkins signaled a potential departure from the SEC's longstanding approach to precatory proposals—i.e., proposals that recommend or request that companies take certain actions, as distinct from proposed bylaw amendments. Paul S. Atkins, Keynote Address at the John L. Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance's 25th Anniversary Gala (Oct. 9, 2025), https://www.sec.gov/newsroom/speeches-statements/atkins-10092025-keynote-address-john-l-weinberg-center-corporate-governances-25th-anniversary-gala. In his speech, Chairman Atkins expressed "high confidence" that SEC staff would grant no-action requests seeking to exclude precatory proposals as improper under Delaware law if such requests are supported by an opinion of counsel. Id. Chairman Atkins went on to announce his support for a "fundamental reassessment" of Rule 14a-8, including the rule's "fundamental premise that shareholders should be able to force companies to solicit for their proposals" at little or no personal expense. Id.
Congress is also considering legislation that would reform various aspects of the shareholder proposal regime, including Rule 14a-8 itself, institutional proxy voting, and the proxy advisor industry.
Under Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Rule 14a-8, public companies must include shareholder proposals in their proxy materials, provided proposal sponsors comply with the rule's eligibility and procedural requirements and the proposals do not fall within certain substantive grounds for exclusion.1 Shareholder proposals generally involve shareholder recommendations regarding corporate governance or environmental and social issues raised by a company's operations.2 Rule 14a-8, often called the shareholder proposal rule, has long been a source of debate. The rule's supporters tout it as "the epicenter of the shareholder rights movement" and credit shareholder proposals with spurring valuable corporate governance reforms.3 Rule 14a-8's critics argue that many proposals seek to advance social and political agendas unrelated to shareholder value, creating costly distractions for corporate management.4
In 2025, shareholder proposals attracted significant attention from policymakers. Aspects of the proposal ecosystem were the subject of three congressional hearings,5 an executive order,6 and state legislation.7 In October 2025, SEC Chairman Paul Atkins announced changes in SEC staff's understanding of Rule 14a-8 that could lay the groundwork for substantial narrowing of the rule.8 The SEC's regulatory flexibility agenda indicates that amendments to the rule may be forthcoming in the spring of 2026.9
This report is a primer on the shareholder proposal rule. It is divided into five parts. First, the report outlines the history of the rule. Second, the report discusses the SEC's no-action process, whereby SEC staff provides its views as to whether companies may exclude specific shareholder proposals from their proxy materials because of a sponsor's non-compliance with Rule 14a-8's eligibility, procedural, or substantive requirements. The third section of the report reviews the rule's eligibility and procedural requirements, while the fourth section examines its 13 substantive exclusions. The final section of the report discusses issues for Congress, including the primary justifications for and criticisms of Rule 14a-8 and proposals to reform the shareholder proposal regime.
The history of the shareholder proposal rule begins with the advent of federal proxy regulation in the 1930s. Proxy regulation, like many other aspects of securities law, was a response to the separation of ownership and control of large public corporations.10 While shareholders are often described as "owning" corporations,11 they do not manage them.12 Rather, state corporate law vests managerial authority in boards of directors,13 which delegate day-to-day decision-making responsibilities to corporate officers.14 The resulting centralization of managerial authority generates well-recognized benefits.15 However, the separation of corporate ownership and control also produces agency costs—losses that result from divergences between the interests of shareholders and those of directors and officers.16 Because of such divergences, corporate leaders may self-deal,17 engage in inefficient "empire building,"18 retain unnecessary levels of cash,19 seek high levels of performance-insensitive compensation,20 resist takeover offers that would benefit shareholders,21 exhibit greater risk aversion than diversified shareholders would prefer,22 and expend less effort than a sole owner.23
Much of corporate and securities law can be understood as an attempt to balance the benefits of centralized managerial authority against the costs that result from delegating corporate control to agents.24 Shareholder voting rights represent one governance mechanism designed to mitigate agency costs.25 A combination of state law, federal law, and stock exchange rules allow shareholders of public companies to vote on certain matters, such as director elections,26 charter amendments,27 mergers,28 and executive compensation plans.29 As relevant here, the SEC has also traditionally interpreted state law as granting shareholders the right to present certain types of proposals for a vote at annual shareholder meetings.30
The mechanics of shareholder voting have evolved over the history of corporate law. At common law, shareholders could vote only by attending an annual meeting in person, unless a corporation's organizing documents provided otherwise.31 While some corporate charters allowed shareholders to delegate voting authority to a proxy who attended an annual meeting, 18th and 19th-century courts were close to unanimous in rejecting the argument that shareholders could vote by proxy in the absence of such a provision or statutory authorization.32
In the late 19th century, the emergence of large corporations with many geographically dispersed shareholders rendered in-person voting problematic, as few shareholders had the incentive and ability to travel to annual meetings.33 State legislatures responded by enshrining a right to proxy voting in statute. Between 1870 and 1900, nearly all states amended their corporate laws to give shareholders the right to vote by proxy.34
Proxy voting has also proved useful to corporations, which solicit proxies to meet state law quorum requirements for annual and special meetings.35 To ensure those requirements are met, public companies ordinarily distribute to shareholders a form of proxy (often called a proxy card or simply a proxy) by which shareholders can authorize a corporate official to vote their shares as instructed.36 In contested votes, shareholders may receive proxies from both incumbent management and a dissident shareholder running an alternative slate of director candidates or opposing a management proposal.37
By the early 20th century, the proxy solicitation process had supplanted the shareholder meeting as the key forum for shareholder voting.38 The proxy system has thus been described as the "main instrument—the beating heart—of corporate power."39
In the wake of the 1929 stock market crash, New Deal reformers sought to regulate a range of practices in securities markets, including the proxy solicitation process.40 Before the adoption of the federal proxy rules, corporations frequently sent shareholders a proxy card giving management sweeping discretionary authorities, sometimes extending for several years.41 Often, proxies authorized a corporate official to vote shares in director elections (which were usually uncontested) and take other actions considered "desirable."42 Shareholders were invited to sign and return proxies, but sometimes were not informed of all the items that would be presented for voting at a shareholder meeting.43 These practices led to concerns that the proxy system had become "a self-perpetuation and ... self-approval device" for incumbent managers.44
Congress responded to these concerns by enacting Section 14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the Exchange Act), which made it unlawful to "solicit" proxies in contravention of rules that the SEC may prescribe "as necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of investors."45 Using this authority, the SEC adopted the first proxy rules in 1935 and has revised them extensively over time.46 Today, the proxy rules apply to companies with securities registered under Section 12 of the Exchange Act—i.e., companies that are listed on a national securities exchange or that exceed certain asset and shareholder thresholds.47
The proxy rules are principally focused on ensuring that solicited shareholders receive adequate disclosures.48 To that end, the rules prohibit soliciting parties from transmitting a proxy card to shareholders unless the card is accompanied or preceded by a proxy statement containing specified information.49 In addition to this core disclosure mandate, the proxy rules include requirements concerning the content of proxy cards (Rule 14a-4),50 an anti-fraud provision prohibiting false or misleading statements and omissions in proxy solicitation materials (Rule 14a-9),51 and a provision governing the circumstances in which companies must include shareholder proposals in their proxy materials, which is often called the shareholder proposal rule (Rule 14a-8).52
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State and Federal Regulation of Corporate Governance Corporate governance is shaped by both state and federal law. With limited exceptions, corporations are chartered at the state level. Under a choice-of-law rule known as the "internal affairs doctrine," matters that are "peculiar to the relationships among or between the corporation and its current officers, directors, and shareholders" are resolved based on the law of the state in which the corporation is organized. Edgar v. Mite Corp., 457 U.S. 624, 645 (1982). Thus, issues such as the fiduciary duties of directors and the basic allocation of powers between boards and shareholders are governed by state law. Gevurtz, infra note 354, at 181–248, 279–409. Delaware has long been the most popular chartering state for large public companies. As of 2024, roughly 65% of the S&P 500 had Delaware charters. Amy Simmerman et al., Delaware's Status as the Favored Corporate Home: Reflections and Considerations, Harv. L. Sch. F. on Corp. Gov. (May 8, 2024), https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2024/05/08/delawares-status-as-the-favored-corporate-home-reflections-and-considerations https://perma.cc/324C-YFKH. Accordingly, in discussing state corporate law, this report focuses primarily on Delaware law. Federal securities law also exerts a significant influence on the governance of publicly traded companies. It is often said that, while state corporate law governs substantive issues of corporate governance, federal securities law is primarily concerned with ensuring that public companies make adequate disclosures to investors. James J. Park, Reassessing the Distinction Between Corporate and Securities Law, 64 UCLA L. Rev. 116, 134–35 (2017). Judicial decisions interpreting the reach of the federal securities laws reflect this distinction. E.g., Santa Fe Indus. v. Green, 430 U.S. 462 (1977); Bus. Roundtable v. SEC, 905 F.2d 406 (D.C. Cir. 1990). Disclosure, however, can shape corporate governance. A requirement to disclose related-party transactions, for example, may discourage problematic self-dealing. 17 C.F.R. § 229.404 (2025). The substance/disclosure distinction between corporate law and securities law is also not entirely accurate, as the governance of exchange-listed companies has become increasingly federalized over the course of the 21st century. Marc I. Steinberg, The Federalization of Corporate Governance 191–224 (2018). For example, federal law now mandates that certain board committees of listed companies consist entirely of directors who are independent from management. 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j-1(m), 78j-3(a). The federal proxy rules blend substantive and disclosure-based regulation. While the proxy rules are primarily focused on disclosure, Bus. Roundtable, 905 F.2d at 410–12, they include some substantive rules—for example, a rule against "bundling" separate proposals and a requirement that companies use universal proxy cards in contested director elections. 17 C.F.R. §§ 240.14a-4(a)(3), 240.14a-19(e). The shareholder proposal rule (a component of the proxy rules) defies easy categorization under the substance/disclosure dichotomy. As discussed below, the shareholder proposal rule can be characterized as a disclosure-based requirement that facilitates shareholders' ability to exercise their substantive state law rights. At the same time, the rule includes eligibility requirements that are not rooted in state law, along with a set of substantive exclusions that has come to resemble a type of federal common law. Med. Comm. for Human Rts. v. SEC, 432 F.2d 659, 677 (D.C. Cir. 1970), vacated as moot by 404 U.S. 403 (1972). Irrespective of whether the shareholder proposal rule is best categorized as substantive or disclosure-based, the rule now plays a central role in U.S. corporate governance. |
Like other elements of the federal proxy rules, the shareholder proposal rule represents an attempt to "replicate the old-style annual meeting that was personally attended by shareholders."53 The SEC adopted the predecessor to Rule 14a-8 based on its view that state law afforded shareholders the right to present certain types of proposals for a vote at annual meetings.54 With widespread proxy voting, however, such proposals had little chance of passing unless corporations included the proposals in their proxy materials. Proposal sponsors thus asked corporations to do so.55 Before the SEC enacted the shareholder proposal rule, management's legal responsibilities in these circumstances were unclear. While the proxy regulations prohibited misleading omissions in proxy materials, they did not explicitly address whether it was misleading for corporations to fail to disclose shareholder proposals that were unrelated to the matters for which management sought proxy authority.56
In several cases in the late 1930s, the SEC took the position that it was materially misleading for a company to omit from its proxy materials issues that it knew would be raised at a shareholder meeting.57 The agency ultimately codified that view in 1940.58 Two years later, the SEC adopted Rule X-14-7, Rule 14a-8's predecessor, which required corporations to include in their proxy materials any shareholder proposal of which they had reasonable notice as long as the proposal involved a "proper subject" for shareholder action.59
In 1945, the SEC's Division of Corporation Finance advised in guidance that whether an issue was a "proper subject" for shareholder action depended on the law of the state in which a corporation was organized.60 Ultimately, the SEC would conclude that shareholder proposals purporting to mandate that companies take certain actions are generally impermissible under state law.61 As a result, with the exception of proposed bylaw amendments (which are discussed in greater detail below), proper shareholder proposals typically must consist of nonbinding recommendations or requests.62 These types of resolutions are called "precatory" proposals and constitute the overwhelming majority of shareholder proposals submitted in a typical year.63
In 1947, the SEC required companies that intended to exclude a shareholder proposal from their proxy materials to file the reasons for the exclusion with the SEC.64 Facing this requirement, companies began to inquire into whether SEC staff would recommend an enforcement action if the companies omitted certain proposals.65 These "no-action" requests—now a core part of the shareholder proposal regime—are discussed in greater detail below.66 Although SEC staff's responses to no-action requests are not binding on any party, the no-action process has led the SEC to assume a key practical role in determining which proposals ultimately proceed to a shareholder vote.67
Also in 1947, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (Third Circuit) issued a significant decision in Rule 14a-8 jurisprudence.68 In SEC v. Transamerica Corp., the Third Circuit affirmed the SEC's authority to issue the shareholder proposal rule.69 The court also held that a corporation was required to include certain proposals in its proxy materials notwithstanding a corporate bylaw that effectively gave management the authority to decide whether to submit the proposals for a shareholder vote.70 This aspect of Transamerica may have implications for current debates over the extent to which corporations can adopt limits on shareholders' proposal rights beyond the restrictions in Rule 14a-8—a topic that is discussed later in this report.71
Over the following decades, the SEC added several substantive exclusions to the shareholder proposal rule. In 1948, the SEC amended the rule to allow companies to exclude from their proxy materials proposals submitted primarily to redress personal grievances and proposals submitted at the previous annual meeting that received less than 3% of votes cast.72 In 1952, the agency adopted an exclusion for proposals submitted "primarily for the purpose of promoting general economic, political, racial, religious, social or similar causes."73 1954 amendments included an exclusion for proposals relating to a company's "ordinary business operations," which would later become one of the rule's most significant exclusions.74 In 1967, the SEC allowed companies to omit proposals that conflicted with a management proposal.75
The initial decades of the shareholder proposal rule's history were dominated by proposals concerning corporate governance matters—for example, cumulative voting, executive compensation, and auditor approval.76 In the late 1960s and 1970s, however, shareholders increasingly utilized the rule to submit proposals that implicated broader social issues,77 such as environmental pollution, labor relations, and racial and gender equality.78
During the previous decades, the SEC had attempted to limit such proposals. In 1945 guidance, the agency's Division of Corporation Finance took the position that corporations could exclude "proposals which deal with general political, social or economic matters" because such matters were not proper subjects for shareholder action.79 SEC staff issued this guidance in response to a corporation's inquiry regarding the propriety of certain proposals that the corporation had no apparent power to implement. The proposals in question requested a federal income tax exemption for dividends, revisions to the enforcement of the antitrust laws, and the enactment of federal legislation concerning workers, farmers, and investors.80 The 1945 guidance concluded that those proposals could be excluded as improper subjects for shareholder action because the shareholder proposal rule was not intended "to permit stockholders to obtain the consensus of other stockholders with respect to matters which are of a general political, social or economic nature," as "[o]ther forums exist for the presentation of such views."81
Several years later, a case involving Greyhound Bus Company raised a related but different question.82 A shareholder had submitted to Greyhound a proposal recommending that the company consider ending its policy of racially segregated seating in the southern United States.83 Thus, unlike the proposals that prompted the 1945 guidance, the proposal to Greyhound concerned the company's conduct. In the words of one commentator, the Greyhound proposal involved "a mixed question of corporate policy and social policy," as opposed to a question of social policy only.84 In the eyes of SEC staff, however, this distinction did not amount to a legal difference; the Division of Corporation Finance concluded that the proposal was not a proper subject for shareholder action under the 1945 guidance.85 The following year, the SEC codified an exclusion for proposals submitted "primarily for the purpose of promoting general economic, political, racial, religious, social or similar causes."86
While these measures reflected the SEC's skeptical view of social policy proposals, the viability of such proposals was not tested in earnest until a wave of activist campaigns in the late 1960s and 1970s. In 1970, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit (D.C. Circuit) was drawn into this debate in Medical Committee for Human Rights v. SEC.87 The case involved a proposal requesting that Dow Chemical Company stop manufacturing napalm, which was being used as a weapon in the Vietnam War.88 The company argued that the proposal fell within Rule 14a-8's exclusions for proposals involving "ordinary business operations" (adopted in 1954) and proposals submitted primarily for the purpose of promoting political or social causes.89 SEC staff granted the company no-action relief, which the SEC later affirmed.90 Neither SEC staff nor the SEC, however, identified the basis on which the proposal was excludable or explained the reasoning behind that conclusion.91 Unsatisfied, the D.C. Circuit remanded the case to the SEC and directed the agency to detail its reasoning.92
While the D.C. Circuit did not decide the merits of the dispute—and the Supreme Court later vacated its decision on mootness grounds—dicta from the opinion evinced a more favorable view of social policy proposals than reflected in SEC practice at the time. In particular, the D.C. Circuit cast doubt on Dow Chemical's effort to advance broad interpretations of both the ordinary business and social policy exclusions. That effort, the D.C. Circuit worried, threatened to create a regime in which "practically any" proposal could be excluded as either too specific (thereby triggering the ordinary business exclusion) or too general (thereby triggering the social policy exclusion).93 The court went on to express skepticism that either exclusion applied to the proposal in question.94 The D.C. Circuit's discussion of the social policy exclusion was especially pointed, suggesting that the exclusion may contravene Section 14(a) of the Exchange Act and its "philosophy of corporate democracy" if read to encompass the proposal.95
The same year that the D.C. Circuit issued the Medical Committee decision, a group of activists announced a widely publicized effort to promote several proposals submitted to General Motors (GM).96 That effort—which came to be known as "Campaign GM"—involved nine proposals raising various environmental and social issues concerning GM's governance and business operations.97 The SEC concluded that GM could exclude seven of the proposals, paving the way for two proposals to proceed to a shareholder vote:
a proposed bylaw amendment that would have expanded GM's board by three directors (Campaign GM announced that, if this amendment passed, it intended to nominate for the new seats a former consumer affairs advisor to President Lyndon Johnson, an African-American civil rights leader, and a professor of environmental biomedicine); and
a proposal to create a "Shareholders Committee for Corporate Responsibility" consisting of representatives of various interests, which would submit a report to shareholders concerning GM's past and present efforts regarding air pollution, vehicle safety, and the social welfare of the nation, among other topics.98
While the proposals received less than 3% support, Campaign GM's leaders declared the project a success, contending that it represented "the beginnings of a great national debate on the issues of corporate responsibility."99 Within months of the vote, GM also named its first African-American director and created board committees to supervise the company's environmental and social efforts.100
Following these developments, the SEC changed its approach to social policy proposals. In 1972, the agency amended the social policy exclusion.101 Whereas the previous version of that exclusion was keyed to a proposal's "purpose" (suggesting a subjective inquiry), the amended exclusion applied to proposals
that action be taken with respect to any matter, including a general economic, political, racial, religious, social, or similar cause, that is not significantly related to the business of the issuer or is not within the control of the issuer.102
The 1972 amendments thus reframed the exclusion around a proposal's relevance to a company's operations. Under the amended exclusion, a company could not omit proposals implicating social policy issues if the proposals were "significantly related" to its business and involved matters within the company's control.103
In 1976, the SEC issued guidance regarding the ordinary business exclusion that likewise reflected a more favorable stance toward social policy proposals.104 The guidance explained that proposals with "significant policy, economic or other implications" generally would not fall within the ordinary business exclusion.105 As a result of this change, by 1976, the SEC's posture toward social policy proposals was the "diametric opposite" of its approach at the start of the decade.106 While the pre-1972 version of Rule 14a-8 permitted companies to exclude proposals motivated by general social policy concerns, the SEC's 1976 guidance allowed proposals to avoid the ordinary business exclusion precisely because they involved such concerns.107 Perhaps unsurprisingly, the 1970s witnessed a surge in proposals involving environmental and social issues.108
In the 1980s and 1990s, the shareholder proposal regime experienced incremental legal changes. While amendments to Rule 14a-8 during that period ultimately proved relatively modest, the SEC on multiple occasions considered more sweeping revisions, some of which would have significantly reduced the agency's participation in the proposal process.109 The most controversial regulatory development of that era involved a 1992 no-action letter that likewise attempted to minimize SEC staff's role as informal arbiter of proposal disputes.110 That effort proved short-lived, however, as the SEC reversed the policy established by the 1992 letter in 1998.111 Alongside these legal changes, the 1980s and 1990s witnessed financial market trends with profound implications for shareholder proposals and corporate governance more generally: the growth and increased engagement of institutional investors.112
In the early 1980s, the SEC conducted a fundamental reexamination of the shareholder proposal rule. In 1982, the agency invited public comment on three alternatives to the existing proposal regime, in addition to the threshold issue of whether shareholders should continue to have access to company proxy statements for the purpose of disseminating proposals.113
Under the first alternative, the SEC proposed retaining the basic structure of the shareholder proposal rule with modest additional restrictions, including minimum ownership and holding-period requirements for proposal proponents.114 The second and third alternatives involved broader changes. Under the second alternative, companies would have been permitted to adopt their own proposal procedures, subject to shareholder approval and certain minimum requirements prescribed by the SEC.115 In this system, SEC staff generally would not have been involved in determining whether specific proposals were excludable. Rather, disagreements would have been resolved pursuant to individual company plans and, if necessary, the courts.116 The third alternative would have significantly broadened shareholder access to company proxy statements by eliminating 11 of Rule 14a-8's 13 exclusions, retaining only the exclusions for proposals that are improper under state law and proposals involving director elections.117 Under this framework, the number of proposals a company would have been required to include in its proxy materials would have been capped by a numerical formula based on the size of its shareholder base.118 SEC staff would have no longer adjudicated no-action requests; instead, courts would have resolved any disputes involving the remaining grounds for exclusion.119
Comments on the proposals reflected "extensive support" for continued shareholder access to company proxy statements and SEC, as opposed to judicial, administration of the proposal process.120 A "substantial majority" of commenters favored the first alternative or the retention of existing rule with no changes.121 There was limited support for the second and third alternatives.122 Many commenters were concerned that allowing companies to adopt their own proposal procedures would produce inconsistent and confusing standards.123 Commenters also criticized the third alternative for suggesting a lottery system to determine which proposals would proceed to a vote in cases where the number of submitted proposals exceeded the prescribed maximum.124
The SEC ultimately decided to retain the basic framework of Rule 14a-8 with several of the changes from the first alternative, including minimum ownership and holding-period requirements for proposal proponents.125
The SEC's interest in paring back its role in proposal disputes did not end with the 1982 proposed amendments. In 1992, SEC staff announced a new categorical approach to the ordinary business exclusion. Under the new approach, companies were permitted to exclude all proposals concerning their employment policies and practices for the general workforce, even if such proposals implicated significant social issues.126 Before adopting this position, SEC staff had applied the agency's 1976 guidance to conclude that proposals related to affirmative action and equal employment opportunity involved significant policy issues, meaning they did not fall within the ordinary business exclusion.127
SEC staff adopted the new categorical approach in granting a no-action request from Cracker Barrel Old Country Store.128 Cracker Barrel sought to exclude a proposal requesting that the company implement a non-discrimination policy concerning sexual orientation.129 In granting the no-action request, SEC staff said that "the line between includable and excludable employment-related proposals based on social policy considerations" had become "increasingly difficult to draw."130 As a result, the no-action letter explained, SEC staff would no longer attempt to draw such distinctions and companies would be permitted to exclude all employment-related proposals.131 The SEC later affirmed the no-action letter.132
Litigation followed. In a 1993 lawsuit against Wal-Mart, a federal district court declined to defer to the SEC's Cracker Barrel position, reasoning that a categorical rule against employment-related proposals was inconsistent with the SEC's 1976 guidance regarding the ordinary business exclusion, which had been promulgated after notice and comment.133 Applying the 1976 guidance, the court ordered Wal-Mart to include in its proxy materials a proposal seeking disclosures regarding the company's equal opportunity policies and efforts.134 The SEC was not a party to the Wal-Mart litigation, however, meaning the court's decision did not require the agency to abandon its Cracker Barrel position.
In a separate lawsuit to which the SEC was a party, a federal district court held that the Cracker Barrel no-action letter represented an amendment of the ordinary business exclusion that violated the notice-and-comment requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA).135 The court thus enjoined the SEC from applying Cracker Barrel absent notice and comment.136 The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (Second Circuit) ultimately lifted that injunction, however, concluding that no-action letters are interpretive (as opposed to legislative) rules and thus not subject to the APA's notice-and-comment requirements.137
While the Second Circuit's decision cleared the way for SEC staff to resume application of Cracker Barrel, controversy persisted. Shareholder activists urged the SEC to rescind the decision.138 Congress also prodded the agency to consider reversing Cracker Barrel. The National Securities Markets Improvement Act of 1996 included a provision instructing the SEC to conduct a study of (1) whether recent statutory, judicial, or regulatory changes had impaired shareholder access to proxy statements under Section 14 of the Exchange Act, and (2) shareholders' ability to have proposals relating to corporate practices and social issues included in proxy statements.139
The following year, the SEC proposed amendments to Rule 14a-8 that included a reversal of the Cracker Barrel position.140 The SEC also proposed several other changes—some favoring proposal proponents, others favoring corporate management—that the agency framed as a "balanced" approach to the "sometimes conflicting concerns of different participants" in the proposal process.141 In 1998, the SEC adopted a final rule reversing the Cracker Barrel policy and returning to a case-by-case approach to employment-related proposals.142 The final amendments did not, however, include some of the more far-reaching revisions to the shareholder proposal rule that the agency had contemplated in its 1997 proposed rule.143
For the first four decades of the shareholder proposal rule, the main proposal sponsors were individual shareholders.144 Beginning in the mid-1980s, another category of proponent grew in prominence: institutional investors.145 Initially, the leading institutional sponsors of shareholder proposals were public pension funds.146 Growth in state and local government employment during the previous decades, coupled with legal changes allowing increased allocation of pension assets to equities, had laid the groundwork for public pension funds to exert themselves as powerful players in corporate governance.147 Starting in 1986, a handful of especially engaged public pension funds began to sponsor large numbers of proposals,148 many of which urged corporations to dismantle takeover defenses, adopt confidential proxy voting, enhance board independence from management, or make changes to executive compensation.149
In the 1990s, public pension funds continued to submit proposals, but increasingly pursued alternative forms of activism, including private outreach to portfolio companies and media campaigns targeting underperforming firms.150 That shift coincided with the emergence of union pension funds as shareholder activists. By 1994, union funds had eclipsed public pension funds as the most frequent institutional sponsors of shareholder proposals.151
Union fund activism generated pushback. Some business groups argued that unions used the proposal process to gain private benefits for labor at the expense of other shareholders, citing union proposals targeting firms engaged in collective bargaining negotiations or facing union organizing campaigns.152 The substance of most union proposals, however, mirrored the types of proposals offered by public pension funds, focusing on general governance issues such as takeover defenses and executive compensation.153
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The 1980s witnessed a wave of hostile takeover attempts—i.e., takeover attempts opposed by incumbent boards. Almost a quarter of large U.S. companies received a hostile bid over the course of the decade, while many others engaged in friendly deals in anticipation of a potential hostile offer. Gordon, infra note 160, at 1521. In many cases, companies adopted defensive measures to ward off actual or potential raids. Common defenses included charter provisions requiring supermajority votes to approve a merger and the issuance of multiple classes of stock with different voting rights. Richard S. Ruback, An Overview of Takeover Defenses, in Mergers and Acquisitions 49, 57, 60 (Alan J. Auerbach, ed. 1988). The most potent takeover defense, however, consists of a combination of a poison pill and a staggered board. Lucian Arye Bebchuk et al., The Powerful Antitakeover Force of Staggered Boards: Theory, Evidence, and Policy, 54 Stan. L. Rev. 887, 890 (2002). Poison pills (also called shareholder rights plans) are designed to deter hostile bids by causing substantial dilution of a bidder's holdings in the target if the bidder crosses a specified ownership threshold without the target board's approval. Paul S. Bird et al., Takeovers: A Strategic Guide to Mergers and Acquisitions § 11.03[A] (4th ed. 2019). Poison pills effectuate this dilution by allowing the target's shareholders (other than the bidder) to purchase shares at a discount once the bidder crosses the relevant threshold. Id. § 11.03[A][2]. Companies convey these rights as a dividend, allowing boards to implement poison pills without shareholder approval. Id. § 11.03[A][1]. Standing alone, a poison pill does not preclude a hostile bidder from gaining control of a target. If a bidder can replace a majority of incumbent directors via a proxy contest, its slate of directors can then redeem the typical poison pill and allow the acquisition to proceed. Jordan M. Barry & John William Hatfield, Pills and Partisans: Understanding Takeover Defenses, 160 U. Pa. L. Rev. 633, 644 (2012). This "ballot box safety valve" becomes less accessible, however, if a company has a staggered board. Id. at 644–46. At companies with staggered boards, directors are grouped into multiple classes, with only one class standing for election each year. Id. at 645. Accordingly, absent certain shareholder rights (e.g., to remove directors without cause at a special meeting or by written consent), the combination of a poison pill and staggered board functionally requires hostile bidders to prevail in two consecutive proxy contests to complete an acquisition. Bebchuk et al., supra, at 899. These hurdles are formidable: an empirical study from 2002 did not identify any instance in which a hostile bidder overcame a staggered board by winning consecutive proxy contests. Id. at 928–29. Delaware courts have given companies broad latitude to adopt and maintain poison pills, Moran v. Household Int'l, Inc., 500 A.2d 1346 (Del. 1985), including in cases where a pill was paired with a staggered board, Air Prods. & Chems. v. Airgas, Inc., 16 A.3d 48 (Del. Ch. 2011). As discussed below, however, shareholder activists have used proposals to urge various restrictions on poison pills and pressure companies to de-stagger their boards. |
The flowering of institutional investor activism during the 1980s and 1990s gave the shareholder proposal rule newfound importance. To that point, few proposals garnered significant support. In a 1981 speech, an SEC Commissioner observed that proposals opposed by management typically received less than 10% of votes cast.154 The Commissioner also said that SEC staff recalled only two instances in the history of the shareholder proposal rule in which such proposals obtained majority votes.155 Institutional activism changed these dynamics. Between 1986 and 1990, more than 20 governance proposals received majority votes in their favor.156 Those figures climbed throughout the 1990s,157 with 33 proposals receiving majority support in 1998.158 Proposals targeting takeover defenses were among the most popular, with proposals seeking to restrict the use of poison pills receiving an average of 54% support in 1994.159
Several developments were responsible for this shift. One factor—perhaps the most foundational—was growth in institutional shareholdings. In 1970, institutions owned roughly a third of the U.S. stock market.160 By 1985, their share had grown to 55%.161 Whereas individual shareholders voted at relatively low rates, institutional investors increasingly used their voting power to advance their governance preferences.
Regulatory changes facilitated these efforts. In 1992, the SEC liberalized the proxy rules governing inter-shareholder communications.162 The changes allowed shareholders not seeking proxy authority to discuss potential proposals among themselves and seek support for proposals without triggering the full panoply of regulations governing other types of proxy solicitations.163 The 1992 amendments are widely credited with making the regulatory climate more hospitable to shareholder activism.164
The trends discussed above accelerated in the 21st century. In 2003, 37% of governance proposals that went to a vote received majority support.165 Proposals to de-stagger boards, remove supermajority vote requirements, and restrict poison pills routinely obtained more than 60% of votes cast.166 While most of these proposals were precatory, corporations grew increasingly responsive to majority votes. One study of proposals that received majority support between 1997 and 2004 found that the rate at which companies implemented such proposals nearly doubled after 2002 to more than 40%.167 Regulatory developments, the standardization of institutional voting policies, and the governance climate of the early 2000s likely contributed to rising rates of majority votes and companies' increased responsiveness to such votes.
The regulatory changes involved mutual funds.168 Traditionally, mutual fund sponsors had been less inclined to activism than public and union pension funds.169 Some commentators have attributed this reticence to actual or prospective business relationships between mutual fund sponsors and public companies.170 A fund sponsor that administers a company's retirement plan or sells a company other services, for example, may be reluctant to submit or support proposals opposed by the company's management.171
In 2003, the SEC adopted rules to address these potential conflicts of interest. One rule required mutual funds to disclose their proxy voting policies and vote records.172 Disclosure of mutual fund voting records prompted increased scrutiny of proposal votes and relationships between fund sponsors and corporate management.173 Another rule required investment advisers—including advisers to mutual funds—to implement policies and procedures reasonably designed to ensure that they vote proxies in the best interests of their clients.174 Under the rule, the relevant policies and procedures must address how advisers resolve material conflicts of interest with their clients—for example, conflicts arising from business relationships between an adviser and a company soliciting proxies.175 The adopting release accompanying the rule made clear that fund sponsors cannot adopt a blanket policy of voting proxies in favor of the management of companies with which they do business.176
The SEC's 2003 rule targeting investment advisers is often highlighted as contributing to two related trends that would shape the shareholder proposal ecosystem: the standardization of institutional voting policies and the increased influence of proxy advisory firms.177 Proxy advisors—firms that provide institutional investors with research, recommendations, and administrative services related to proxy voting—first emerged in the 1980s.178 The SEC's 2003 conflict-of-interest rule appeared to steer mutual fund sponsors in their direction, identifying proxy advisors as a possible means by which fund sponsors could discharge their compliance obligations. In the rule's adopting release, the SEC explained that a fund adviser can demonstrate compliance with the requirement to mitigate conflicts of interest by voting proxies "in accordance with a pre-determined policy, based upon the recommendations of an independent third party."179 The following year, SEC staff issued no-action letters addressing the circumstances in which proxy advisors could be deemed "independent."180 The 2003 rule and 2004 no-action letters are broadly viewed as increasing demand for proxy advisors.181
Against this backdrop, institutional investors increasingly voted on shareholder proposals in accordance with standardized policies.182 Mutual fund advisers confronted with hundreds of proposals often deemed it uneconomical to evaluate individual proposals in light of company-specific details, preferring to vote based on rules of thumb from their own in-house guidelines or the recommendations of a proxy advisor.183 As a result, proposals tailored to institutional voting policies were likely to obtain majority support.184 While mutual funds still rarely submit proposals,185 their voting weight led them to become "the center of power in corporate governance."186
The standardization of institutional voting also pushed companies to be more responsive to proposals that received majority votes. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, public and union pension funds organized campaigns to vote against or withhold votes from directors at companies that failed to implement proposals that received majority support.187 In 2000, one of the leading proxy advisors—Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS)—moved in a similar direction, adopting a policy of generally recommending that shareholders withhold votes from directors at companies that had not implemented majority-supported proposals within certain timeframes.188 Today, the other major proxy advisor—Glass, Lewis & Co. (Glass Lewis)—takes the position that "an initial level of board responsiveness" in the form of engagement and disclosures is warranted when proposals receive more than 30% support.189
The corporate climate of the early 2000s likewise encouraged boards to be more responsive to shareholder preferences. That era was marred by a series of accounting scandals at major firms—including Enron, WorldCom, and Tyco International—that prompted widespread anxiety about the state of U.S. corporate governance.190 This wave of scandals drove the enactment of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in 2002 and a series of rule changes by the major stock exchanges.191 In the eyes of many observers, it also created an environment in which boards sought to avoid the perception that they were indifferent to shareholder concerns.192
Several governance trends sprouted from this milieu, including a decline in the number of staggered boards and extensive adoption of majority voting for uncontested director elections, advisory shareholder votes on executive compensation, and proxy access.
While shareholders had submitted proposals to de-stagger boards since the 1980s, support for de-staggering proposals and companies' responsiveness to those proposals increased sharply post-2000.193 As a result, staggered boards have become far less common. In 2002, 61% of S&P 500 companies had a staggered board; by 2022, that figure had fallen to 12%.194
The shift toward majority voting in uncontested director elections was similarly pronounced. Most states have a default rule under which directors are elected based on a plurality voting standard, but allow corporations to adopt an alternative standard in their charter or bylaws.195 Under a plurality voting standard, the director nominee who receives the most votes for a given seat is elected.196 Accordingly, in an uncontested election governed by a plurality standard, a nominee can be elected with only a single vote in his or her favor.197 In 2005, voting standards emerged as a popular target for shareholder activists, who argued that the plurality rule—coupled with the expense and rarity of proxy contests—rendered most director elections a purely ceremonial exercise.198
Over the following years, shareholders submitted hundreds of proposals requesting that corporations adopt alternative voting standards for uncontested director elections, including standards requiring that nominees receive majority support to be elected.199 The campaign to promote majority voting has been characterized as "one of the most popular and successful corporate governance reform efforts."200 While few companies employed a majority voting standard in 2005,201 nearly 90% of the S&P 500 had adopted majority voting by 2017.202
The push for advisory shareholder votes on executive compensation—often called "say on pay"—was even more successful. Proposals requesting say on pay proliferated in the 2000s.203 Congress took notice. In 2009, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act required companies that received financial assistance from the Treasury Department's Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) to conduct annual say-on-pay votes while their obligations incurred under TARP remained outstanding.204 The following year, the Dodd-Frank Act expanded say on pay.205 The statute required companies subject to the SEC's proxy rules to conduct advisory shareholder votes on executive compensation at least every three years, in addition to a separate advisory vote every six years on the frequency of say-on-pay votes.206 Most public companies conduct annual say-on-pay votes,207 consistent with the voting guidelines of the leading proxy advisors and several of the largest institutional investors.208
In the 2010s, proxy access joined the list of governance reforms that shareholders advocated through proposals.209 Proxy access is a mechanism by which certain large long-term shareholders are allowed to place their own director nominees on a company's proxy card, avoiding some of the costs of mounting a traditional proxy contest.210 This report defers a more detailed discussion of proxy access to the subsection on Rule 14a-8's election exclusion.211 For present purposes, it suffices to note that shareholder proposals appear to have prompted many companies to adopt proxy access. As of 2024, 85% of S&P 500 companies had adopted some form of proxy access,212 compared to less than 1% in 2014.213
The trends discussed above have been strongest among large-capitalization companies, which receive the majority of shareholder proposals.214 Mid- and small-cap firms have adopted annual director elections, majority voting, and proxy access at much lower rates than their large-cap counterparts.215 Many companies outside the S&P 500 thus continue to receive proposals regarding these issues.216 In recent years, other common governance proposals include those involving shareholders' right to call special meetings, requests for an independent board chair, and requests to eliminate supermajority vote requirements.217
Proposals involving environmental and social issues (E&S proposals) were slower to gain significant traction with shareholders than governance proposals. Between 2000 and 2008, median levels of support for E&S proposals hovered in the mid-single digits.218 After the 2008 financial crisis, however, E&S proposals began to exert a greater influence on corporate behavior. Support levels for E&S proposals increased throughout the 2010s, as did the percentage of E&S proposals that were withdrawn by their proponents before a meeting.219 Withdrawn proposals often signal that a corporation has reached a settlement with the proponent, with the corporation agreeing to take certain actions in exchange for the withdrawal of the proposal.220
The 2021 proxy season witnessed a large spike in support for environmental proposals, many of which focused on climate change.221 That year, 46% of environmental proposals that went to a vote received majority support.222 2021 also marked a record for the share of E&S proposals that were withdrawn, with proponents pulling 49% of such proposals before a shareholder vote.223 During the following proxy seasons, however, support levels for E&S proposals—and the percentage of E&S proposals that were withdrawn—declined from their 2021 peaks.224
Since 2017, the landscape for E&S proposals has been buffeted by shifts in SEC guidance that have accompanied changes in presidential administration. The guidance has come in the form of staff legal bulletins outlining the Division of Corporation Finance's analytical approach to no-action requests. This report provides a more detailed overview of the relevant bulletins in later discussions of Rule 14a-8's substantive exclusions.225 The overarching narrative, however, is that SEC staff's approach to the "ordinary business" and "relevance" exclusions under the Biden Administration allowed for a broader range of E&S proposals than its approach under the first and second Trump Administrations.226
In recent years, common subjects for E&S proposals have included climate change, "diversity, equity, and inclusion" (DEI), corporate lobbying and political expenditures, and human rights issues.227 These types of E&S proposals have assumed greater salience alongside the rise of what is often called "ESG" investing and activism. While "ESG"—an abbreviation for "environmental, social, and governance"—does not have a universally agreed-upon meaning,228 it often "operates as something of an umbrella term" for two distinct approaches to investing and activism.229 One variant of ESG involves investors forgoing "some degree of profit-seeking" and instead "demanding more prosocial behavior from portfolio companies, either by divesting from bad actors, or by using their voting power to influence corporate policy."230 This strand of ESG is a form of "concessionary" investing because it involves sacrificing financial returns to promote non-pecuniary objectives.231 Another category of ESG investing and activism involves the consideration or promotion of environmental, social, and governance factors as a means of improving risk-adjusted financial returns.232 Investors employing this strategy might believe that companies with strong environmental records or diverse boards exhibit better long-term financial performance than other firms.233
ESG investing and E&S shareholder proposals have generated controversy.234 Critics argue that many E&S proposals are driven by concessionary objectives that harm corporate financial performance.235 Much of the debate surrounding E&S proposals involves the role of intermediaries such as mutual fund sponsors and proxy advisors.236 These issues—which have attracted the attention of the White House, the SEC, and multiple congressional subcommittees—are discussed in greater detail later in this report.237
In addition to receiving scrutiny from policymakers, ESG activism has catalyzed a wave of what are often called "anti-ESG" shareholder proposals.238 Examples of anti-ESG proposals include requests that corporations consider ending DEI initiatives or prepare reports on the risks of carbon-mitigation commitments.239 While recent proxy seasons have seen a surge in anti-ESG proposals, such proposals have generally received low levels of shareholder support.240
As of this writing, the shareholder proposal rule may be approaching an inflection point. In an October 2025 speech, SEC Chairman Paul Atkins signaled a potential departure from the SEC's longstanding approach to precatory proposals, questioning whether such proposals are proper as a matter of Delaware law.241 Chairman Atkins also expressed "high confidence" that SEC staff would grant no-action requests seeking to exclude precatory proposals as improper under Delaware law if such requests are supported by an opinion of counsel.242 This possible change could have major ramifications; according to some estimates, precatory proposals constitute roughly 98% of proposals submitted in a typical proxy season.243
The following month, the SEC's Division of Corporation Finance announced that it would not respond "substantively" to no-action requests for the 2025-2026 proxy season, except for requests seeking to exclude proposals as improper subjects for shareholder action.244 In its announcement, the Division of Corporation Finance cited "current resource and timing considerations following the lengthy government shutdown," along with the availability of an "extensive body of guidance" on shareholder proposals.245 While SEC staff will not respond "substantively" to no-action requests (other than those implicating the "improper subject" exclusion), it will provide companies with letters indicating that the Division of Corporation of Finance does not object to decisions to exclude proposals, provided companies represent that they have a "reasonable basis" for excluding the proposals under Rule 14a-8.246
Chairman Atkins' October 2025 speech also suggested other possible changes to the shareholder proposal regime. Endorsing a view previously expressed by SEC Commissioner Mark Uyeda,247 Chairman Atkins argued that existing law permits companies to adopt their own "procedural" standards for shareholder proposals in their governing documents.248 He also announced that, in his view, "a fundamental reassessment of Rule 14a-8 is in order," and that the SEC "should re-evaluate the rule's fundamental premise that shareholders should be able to force companies to solicit for their proposals" at little or no personal expense.249
The SEC's regulatory flexibility agenda forecasts proposed amendments to Rule 14a-8 in the spring of 2026.250
As discussed, the SEC no-action process has long been an integral feature of the shareholder proposal regime. While the SEC has on multiple occasions considered changes to Rule 14a-8 that would reduce the agency's role in the shareholder proposal process, corporations and shareholder groups alike have successfully resisted such efforts.251 The SEC thus remains a central player in disputes over the excludability of shareholder proposals, reviewing hundreds of no-action requests each year.252
The SEC no-action process is not the product of a legal mandate. Although Rule 14a-8 requires corporations that plan to omit a shareholder proposal from their proxy materials to notify the SEC and explain the basis for the omission no later than 80 days before filing a definitive proxy statement,253 the rule does not require corporations to seek or obtain a favorable no-action response before omitting a proposal. Nevertheless, in pursuit of regulatory clarity, companies generally file their reasons for excluding a proposal in the form of a request for no-action relief.254 The SEC is not required to answer such requests.255 Rather, the SEC has explained that it responds to no-action requests "as a convenience to both companies and shareholders" to assist them in complying with the proxy rules.256 The proponent of a shareholder proposal may provide the SEC with a response to the company's arguments for excludability, but is not required to do so.257 Corporations bear the burden of demonstrating that they are entitled to exclude a proposal from their proxy materials.258
SEC staff typically offers one of three responses to requests for no-action relief:
that there "appears to be some basis" for a company's view that it may exclude a proposal from its proxy materials and that SEC staff therefore will not recommend an enforcement action if the company omits the proposal;
that SEC staff is "unable to concur" in the company's view that it may exclude the proposal and that SEC staff disagrees with the asserted basis for exclusion; or
that SEC staff expresses "no view" regarding the company's intention to omit the proposal from its proxy materials.259
As discussed in several sections below, if SEC staff identifies deficiencies in a proposal that can be cured, it may permit the proponent to remedy the deficiencies and resubmit the proposal.260 Often, no-action responses are limited to a statement of SEC staff's enforcement posture and do not include detailed explanations of the staff's reasoning.261
Corporations and shareholders can seek reconsideration of a no-action response by SEC staff, but such requests are rarely successful.262 Cases in which SEC staff have granted such requests include those in which a party submitted new or additional facts not provided in the original no-action request; obtained a legal opinion to support arguments based on state, federal, or foreign law where it had previously not provided one; or raised additional arguments for exclusion not presented in the original no-action request.263
Parties can also seek review of no-action responses by the SEC.264 The agency's regulations provide that SEC staff may, upon request or on its own motion, present questions to the SEC that involve "matters of substantial importance" where "the issues are novel or highly complex."265 The decision to present questions to the SEC is entirely within the discretion of SEC staff,266 and requests for SEC review of no-action responses are seldom granted.267
SEC no-action responses are not binding on any party.268 They reflect only the informal views of SEC staff, which has advised that such responses "do not and cannot adjudicate the merits of a company's position" with respect to a shareholder proposal.269 "Only a court," SEC staff has explained, "can decide whether a shareholder proposal can be excluded from a company's proxy materials."270 Accordingly, no-action responses do not preclude a company or the proponent of a proposal from pursuing its rights via litigation.271
Shareholders that litigate a company's exclusion of a proposal usually seek a temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction in federal district court to prevent a company from distributing its proxy materials without the proposal.272 A company may also seek a declaratory judgment that it is permitted to omit a proposal.273 The SEC can bring enforcement actions against companies that improperly exclude proposals from their proxy materials, but such actions are very rare.274
Despite the availability of litigation as an option for resolving disputes over shareholder proposals, most companies and proponents accept no-action responses as the final word on whether a proposal may be omitted.275 As a result, SEC staff has a major influence on which proposals are ultimately presented for a shareholder vote.
In most years, a significant percentage of submitted proposals are withdrawn, which often signals a settlement between a company and the proponent of the withdrawn proposal.276 These settlements remain an opaque area within the shareholder proposal regime; proposal settlements are not subject to SEC oversight and there is no central repository of settlement agreements.277 Proposal settlements are akin to contracts between a corporation and the proponent of a proposal, with the corporation agreeing to take certain actions in exchange for the withdrawal of the proposal.278 While the terms and even the existence of many shareholder proposal settlements are private, some settlement agreements include disclosure commitments involving issues such as political expenditures, the environmental effects of a company's operations, and human rights standards.279
Rule 14a-8 includes a variety of eligibility and procedural requirements. To be eligible to submit a proposal under the rule, a shareholder must meet certain ownership thresholds, which the SEC made more restrictive in 2020.280 Under the tiered approach adopted in 2020, eligible shareholders must have continuously held
at least $2,000 in market value of the relevant company's securities entitled to vote on the proposal for at least three years;
at least $15,000 in market value of the company's securities entitled to vote on the proposal for at least two years; or
at least $25,000 in market value of the company's securities entitled to vote on the proposal for at least one year.281
The proponent of a proposal must provide the company with evidence documenting its eligibility.282 Proponents must also provide the company with written statements that they (1) intend to hold the requisite amount of securities through the date of the meeting for which they submit a proposal, and (2) are able to meet with the company in person or via teleconference.283 In offering to meet with the company, proponents must identify specific days and times within the regular business hours of the company's principal executive office that they are available.284
Rule 14a-8 limits proponents to one proposal per company for a particular meeting.285 Proposals and accompanying statements must not exceed 500 words and must be received by the company at least 120 days before the one-year anniversary of the company's distribution of its proxy statement for the previous year's annual meeting.286
Shareholder proponents or their representatives must appear in person at the shareholder meeting to present their proposals.287 If the proponent of a proposal fails to abide by this requirement without good cause, the company may exclude the proponent's proposals from its proxy materials for any meetings held in the following two calendar years.288
If a company seeks to omit a proposal on eligibility or procedural grounds, it must notify the proponent within 14 days of receiving the proposal, unless the deficiency cannot be remedied (e.g., because the proponent submitted the proposal after the deadline).289 Proponents must correct deficiencies within 14 days of receiving notice from the company.290
Rule 14a-8(i)(1) permits a company to exclude a proposal that is not a "proper subject for action by shareholders" under the laws of the jurisdiction of the company's organization.291 This "improper subject" exclusion is the oldest substantive exclusion in the shareholder proposal rule.292 While the exclusion turns on the application of state law, there is little state law precedent directly addressing which issues qualify as "proper" subjects for shareholder action.293 As a result, in administering the "improper subject" exclusion, SEC staff has developed something akin to its own common law on that topic.294 Two categories of proposals have emerged from this process: precatory proposals and bylaw amendments.
State corporate law vests managerial authority in boards of directors, not shareholders.295 That principle underpins the following note to Rule 14a-8(i)(1):
Depending on the subject matter, some proposals are not considered proper under state law if they would be binding on the company if approved by shareholders. In our [i.e., the SEC's] experience, most proposals that are cast as recommendations or requests that the board of directors take specified action are proper under state law. Accordingly, we will assume that a proposal drafted as a recommendation or suggestion is proper unless the company demonstrates otherwise.296
Proposals framed as recommendations or requests, often called precatory proposals, constitute the overwhelming majority of shareholder proposals submitted in a typical year.297
The SEC's approach to precatory proposals appears to be changing. In an October 2025 speech, SEC Chairman Paul Atkins signaled a potential departure from the above text, questioning whether precatory proposals in fact constitute "proper subjects" for shareholder action under Delaware law.298 In posing that question, Chairman Atkins cited a forthcoming law review article by a Delaware attorney concluding that Delaware law does not give shareholders an "inherent right" to submit precatory proposals.299 If this conclusion is correct, Chairman Atkins continued, and a corporation has not created such a right in its governing documents, "then one could make an argument that a precatory shareholder proposal submitted to a Delaware company is excludable under [Rule 14a-8(i)(1)]."300 Chairman Atkins then indicated that, if a company makes this argument in a no-action request accompanied by an opinion of counsel, the company "should prevail."301 He also expressed "high confidence" that SEC staff will honor this position.302
The approach outlined by Chairman Atkins may have significant implications for the shareholder proposal regime. According to some estimates, precatory proposals constitute roughly 98% of proposals submitted in a typical proxy season.303 Thus, if precatory proposals are improper under state law, nearly all shareholder proposals submitted in recent years would have been excludable.304 The extent to which companies would take advantage of this expanded exclusion, however, remains uncertain. The prospect of receiving negative attention from shareholder activists and proxy advisors may deter some corporations from adopting a categorical stance against all precatory proposals.305 Additionally, shareholders may respond to the change discussed by Chairman Atkins by proposing bylaw amendments authorizing precatory proposals.306
Delaware courts (and courts applying the laws of other states) would likely prove to be the final arbiters of the propriety of precatory proposals.307 Chairman Atkins appeared to contemplate this possibility in his October 2025 speech, noting that Delaware's constitution allows the SEC to certify questions to the Delaware Supreme Court.308
It is unclear how the Delaware Supreme Court would rule on the propriety of precatory proposals. Section 211(b) of the Delaware General Corporation Law (DGCL) requires corporations to hold annual meetings at which directors are elected and provides that "[a]ny other proper business may be transacted at the annual meeting."309 The DGCL does not define "proper business," however, and there is little case law addressing that issue.310 The DGCL and Delaware judicial decisions thus do not appear to authorize or prohibit precatory proposals explicitly.311 The forthcoming law review article that Chairman Atkins referenced in his speech argues that this doctrinal silence should be interpreted as militating against an "inherent right" to submit precatory proposals given Delaware's board-centric governance model and prioritization of private ordering.312
Others have contested this analysis, contending that the right to present and vote on precatory proposals is grounded in Section 121 of the DGCL and the overall governance scheme created by the statute.313 Section 121 of the DGCL provides that corporations and their officers, directors, and shareholders shall possess powers that are "incidental" to certain expressly granted powers "so far as such [incidental] powers and privileges are necessary or convenient to the conduct, promotion or attainment of the business or purposes set forth in [a corporation's] certificate of incorporation."314 Some commentators have argued that Section 121, read together with other DGCL provisions—including those involving director elections, director removal, and shareholder voting rights—suggests that shareholders have an "incidental" power to submit and vote on advisory resolutions.315 Defenders of precatory proposals have also cited case law from Delaware and other states that, in their view, supports such a power.316
A corporation's organizing documents consist of its charter (sometimes called the certificate or articles of incorporation) and bylaws.317 The charter defines "the broad and general aspects of the corporate entity's existence and nature."318 Charters must include certain basic information—for example, the corporation's name and number of authorized shares.319 The DGCL provides that charters may also include any provisions defining the powers of the corporation, directors, and shareholders as long as such provisions are not contrary to Delaware law.320 Most states, including Delaware, provide that charter amendments must be initiated by the board of directors and then approved by shareholders.321 Because most states do not allow shareholders to initiate charter amendments, shareholder proposals advocating charter amendments typically must be phrased as requests that the board "take the steps necessary" to amend the charter in specified ways.322
A corporation's bylaws "are generally regarded as the proper place for the self-imposed rules and regulations deemed expedient for its convenient functioning to be laid down."323 Matters commonly addressed in bylaws include annual meetings, board size, director resignations, board vacancies, and indemnification rights.324 Most states, including Delaware, allow shareholders to amend the bylaws on their own initiative without board approval.325 The DGCL also allows corporations to adopt charter provisions granting their boards concurrent authority to amend bylaws,326 and almost all public corporations do so.327 Under Delaware law, the adoption of a charter provision permitting the board to amend the bylaws does not divest shareholders of that power.328 Because shareholders have this statutory right in most states, bylaw amendment proposals are the exception to the general principle that shareholder proposals must be phrased in precatory form to be proper under state law.329
Shareholders' bylaw-amendment power is not without limit, however. Bylaw proposals frequently implicate unsettled issues of state law because of the tension between two types of statutory provisions. On the one hand, as discussed, state corporate statutes vest managerial authority in boards of directors.330 Section 141(a) of the DGCL, for example, provides that
[t]he business and affairs of every corporation ... shall be managed by or under the direction of a board of directors, except as may be otherwise provided in this chapter or in its certificate of incorporation.331
As the note to Rule 14a-8(i)(1) reflects, Section 141(a) and similar provisions in other states have traditionally been understood as preventing shareholders from dictating specific business decisions.332
On the other hand, state corporate statutes generally impose few explicit limits on shareholders' power to adopt bylaw amendments. Section 109(b) of the DGCL, for example, prohibits fee-shifting bylaws involving litigation over internal corporate claims, but otherwise provides that bylaws may include
any provision, not inconsistent with law or with the certificate of incorporation, relating to the business of the corporation, the conduct of its affairs, and its rights or powers or the rights or powers of its stockholders, directors, officers or employees.333
The scope of shareholders' bylaw-amendment power is not obvious from the plain text of these provisions. Section 109(b) says that bylaws cannot be "inconsistent with law," meaning Section 141(a)—which provides for board management—may limit the ways in which shareholder-adopted bylaws can restrict board authority.334 A shareholder-adopted bylaw requiring a corporation to buy or sell a certain type of product, for example, would likely be inconsistent with the proposition that boards—not shareholders—have managerial authority.335
At the same time, Section 141(a) explicitly contemplates limits on board authority, providing for board management "except as may be otherwise provided in this chapter," with "this chapter" presumably including Section 109(b).336 Highlighting these wrinkles, one scholar has argued that Sections 109(b) and 141(a) create a "recursive loop," raising questions regarding the balance of power between boards and shareholders that statutory formalism cannot answer.337
There is limited state law precedent addressing the scope of shareholders' power to restrict board authority in bylaws.338 The leading Delaware decision addressing this issue is CA, Inc. v. AFSCME Employees Pension Plan.339 In that case, the SEC certified to the Delaware Supreme Court questions regarding the propriety of a proposed bylaw that would have required a corporation to reimburse the reasonable expenses incurred by dissident shareholders who obtained at least one board seat in a proxy contest.340 Specifically, the SEC asked the Delaware Supreme Court (1) whether the proposed bylaw was a proper subject for shareholder action under Delaware law, and (2) whether the proposed bylaw would cause the company to violate Delaware law, which would trigger a separate exclusion under Rule 14a-8(i)(2).341
At the outset of its analysis in CA, the Delaware Supreme Court explained that, in light of Section 141(a) of the DGCL, shareholders' bylaw-amendment power is not coextensive with the board's concurrent power and is "limited by the board's management prerogatives."342 In identifying the relevant limits, the Court drew a distinction between shareholder-adopted bylaws that prescribe substantive business decisions (which are invalid) and shareholder-adopted bylaws that "define the process and procedures by which those decisions are made" (which may be valid).343
The Court then applied that distinction to conclude that the proposed bylaw at issue in CA was a proper subject for shareholder action because it had "both the intent and effect of regulating the process for electing directors," even though it was "infelicitously couched as a substantive-sounding mandate to expend corporate funds."344 The Court emphasized that a bylaw's status as procedural or substantive "must necessarily be determined in light of its context and purpose."345 The expense-reimbursement bylaw was procedural, the Court concluded, because it involved director elections (a subject in which shareholders have "a legitimate and protected interest") and its purpose was to "promote the integrity of that electoral process by facilitating the nomination of director candidates by stockholders."346
(The Delaware Supreme Court went on to hold that the proposed bylaw would have caused the company to violate Delaware law because it would have required the board to pay an insurgent's expenses even in cases where directors' fiduciary duties precluded reimbursement—for example, where a proxy contest was motivated by "personal or petty concerns" or waged to promote interests adverse to those of the corporation.347 After the CA decision, Delaware amended the DGCL to authorize bylaws providing for the reimbursement of expenses incurred by shareholders in soliciting proxies for director elections.348)
One issue that remains unresolved in Delaware and some other states is the extent to which shareholder-adopted bylaws can restrict board authority to adopt or maintain a poison pill.349 Some companies have attempted to exclude such proposals on the grounds that they are improper under state law (Rule 14a-8(i)(1)) and that they would cause the companies to violate state law if implemented (Rule 14a-8(i)(2)).350
The Oklahoma Supreme Court confronted these issues in its 1999 decision in International Brotherhood of Teamsters General Fund v. Fleming Companies, Inc., which involved a shareholder-enacted bylaw requiring a company to redeem a poison pill and obtain shareholder approval before adopting any new poison pill.351 The company challenged the legality of the bylaw, arguing that it conflicted with a provision in Oklahoma's corporation statute permitting corporations to issue options.352 The Oklahoma Supreme Court rejected this argument, upholding the bylaw after determining that nothing in Oklahoma's corporation statute indicated that the board's power to issue options was "exempt" from shareholder-adopted bylaws.353
Fleming appears to endorse a more expansive view of shareholder power than the Delaware Supreme Court's decision in CA.354 The Oklahoma Supreme Court did not address Oklahoma's analog to Section 141(a) of the DGCL—an omission that may limit the decision's influence as persuasive authority in other states.355 A bylaw requiring the redemption of an existing poison pill appears to prescribe a substantive business decision, and Delaware courts may deem such a bylaw invalid for that reason.356 In contrast, a bylaw requiring shareholder approval of future poison pills may qualify as procedural and thus valid.357 That conclusion, however, is necessarily speculative. Some types of shareholder-approval requirements—for example, those involving product offerings—may impermissibly infringe on board prerogatives under the CA analysis.358 Whether a bylaw subjecting poison pills to a binding shareholder vote would fall within that category remains uncertain. CA leaves this question and a variety of others regarding shareholders' bylaw-amendment power unanswered.359
SEC staff's approach to bylaw proposals that implicate unsettled issues of state law has evolved over time. In the late 1990s, several no-action letters involving such proposals indicated that SEC staff was "unable to concur" in the company's view that a proposal was excludable, but did not express explicit disagreement with that view—a departure from staff's standard denial language.360 Some commentators criticized this development, contending that it gave companies greater leeway to exclude bylaw proposals.361 In the early 2000s, SEC staff abandoned this "agnostic" approach and adopted its current posture toward no-action requests implicating unsettled issues of state law.362 Today, SEC staff generally denies such requests and concludes that, without controlling state law, the company seeking no-action relief has not carried its burden of demonstrating excludability under Rule 14a-8(g).363
Rule 14a-8(i)(2) permits a company to exclude a proposal that would, if implemented, cause the company to violate any state, federal, or foreign law to which it is subject.364 While this exclusion overlaps with Rule 14a-8(i)(1)'s "improper subject" exclusion, it provides a distinct basis upon which companies may omit a proposal from their proxy materials.365 The "improper subject" exclusion applies to proposals involving subjects that are facially improper for shareholder action.366 Rule 14a-8(i)(2), in contrast, permits the exclusion of proposals that would cause a company to violate state law if implemented, even if the subject matter of the proposal is proper on its face.367
As mentioned, companies sometimes seek to exclude bylaw proposals under both Rule 14a-8(i)(1) and Rule 14a-8(i)(2). Under Rule 14a-8(i)(2), SEC staff has allowed companies to exclude bylaw proposals that would conflict with provisions in their charters.368 Corporations have also successfully invoked Rule 14a-8(i)(2) to exclude proposals that would, if implemented, cause them to breach existing contracts, including employment agreements with executives.369
Rule 14a-8(i)(3) allows a company to exclude a proposal if the proposal or its supporting statement is contrary to any of the SEC's proxy rules, including Rule 14a-9, which prohibits materially false or misleading statements in proxy solicitation materials.370 In Staff Legal Bulletin (SLB) 14B, SEC staff identified the following circumstances in which Rule 14a-8(i)(3) may offer a basis for excluding a proposal:
a proposal's supporting statement impugns character, integrity, or personal reputation, or directly or indirectly makes charges concerning improper, illegal, or immoral conduct or association, without factual foundation;
the company demonstrates objectively that a factual statement is materially false or misleading;
a proposal is so inherently vague or indefinite that neither shareholders nor the company would be able to determine with any reasonable certainty what actions or measures the proposal requires; or
substantial portions of a proposal's supporting statement are irrelevant to a consideration of the proposal's subject matter, such that there is a strong likelihood that a reasonable shareholder would be uncertain as to the matter on which she is being asked to vote.371
In contrast, SLB 14B explained that companies may not rely upon Rule 14a-8(i)(3) to exclude a proposal on the basis that
the company objects to factual assertions because they are not supported;
the company objects to factual assertions that, while not materially false or misleading, may be disputed or countered;
the company objects to factual assertions because those assertions may be interpreted by shareholders in a manner that is unfavorable to the company, its directors, or its officers; or
the company objects to statements because they represent the opinion of the shareholder proponent or a referenced source, but the statements are not identified specifically as such.372
Rule 14a-8(i)(4) allows a company to exclude a proposal if the proposal relates to the redress of a personal claim or grievance against the company or any other person or is designed to result in a benefit to the proponent, or to further a personal interest, which is not shared by the other shareholders at large.373 Rule 14a-8(i)(4) has been successfully invoked to exclude proposals that on their face involve personal grievances, many of which have been submitted by disgruntled former employees.374 SEC staff has also permitted companies to rely on Rule 14a-8(i)(4) to exclude proposals based on evidence linking a proposal to a personal grievance, even where that grievance is not apparent from the four corners of the proposal. For example, SEC staff has allowed a company to exclude a proposal requesting the creation of an ethics committee chaired by an outside director where the proponent was a former employee who had sued the company and been involved in various disputes with it.375
Rule 14a-8(i)(5) permits a company to exclude a proposal if the proposal relates to operations which account for less than 5% of the company's total assets at the end of its most recent fiscal year, and for less than 5% of the company's net earnings and gross sales for its most recent fiscal year, provided the proposal is not "otherwise significantly related to the company's business."376 This "relevance" exclusion traces its roots to 1952, when the SEC amended the shareholder proposal rule to allow the exclusion of proposals submitted "primarily for the purpose of promoting general economic, political, racial, religious, social or similar causes."377 In 1972, the SEC replaced that subjective inquiry, amending the exclusion to cover proposals consisting of
a recommendation, request, or mandate that action be taken with respect to any matter, including a general economic, political, racial, religious, social, or similar cause, that is not significantly related to the business of the issuer or is not within the control of the issuer.378
In 1976, the agency removed the language concerning "general economic, political, racial, religious, social or similar causes," deeming it "superfluous."379 In adopting this change, the SEC rejected suggestions to expand the relevance exclusion to allow companies to omit any proposal that lacked a "significant economic relation to the issuer's business."380 Instead, the SEC explained that the relevance exclusion was not "hinged solely on the economic relativity of a proposal," and that proposals involving governance and ethical issues may be significant to a company's business "even though such significance is not apparent from an economic viewpoint."381 1983 amendments to Rule 14a-8 gave the relevance exclusion its current form, adding the 5% numerical thresholds but preserving the permissibility of proposals that are "otherwise significantly related" to a company's business.382
For much of the shareholder proposal rule's history, SEC staff adopted a narrow interpretation of Rule 14a-8(i)(5), concluding that many matters that are not economically significant to a company may nevertheless qualify as "otherwise significantly related" to its business.383 In a 1982 release, the SEC explained that staff had generally denied no-action relief under the relevance exclusion "where a proposal has reflected social or ethical issues, rather than economic concerns, raised by the issuer's business, and the issuer conducts any such business, no matter how small."384
This approach continued after the SEC adopted the relevance exclusion's 5% numerical thresholds, partially as a result of Lovenheim v. Iroquois Brands, Ltd., a 1985 decision from the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.385 In Lovenheim, a shareholder sought an injunction requiring a company to include in its proxy materials a proposal that the board
study the methods by which its French supplier produces paté de foie gras, and report to the shareholders its findings and opinions, based on expert consultation, on whether this production method causes undue distress, pain or suffering to the animals involved and, if so, whether further distribution of this product should be discontinued until a more humane production method is developed.386
The company attempted to exclude the proposal under Rule 14a-8(i)(5) on the ground that paté de foie gras accounted for none of its earnings and less than .05% of its assets.387 The court sided with the shareholder, relying on past SEC practice to conclude that the relevance exclusion does not apply to proposals that have "ethical and social significance," provided such proposals also have a meaningful relationship to a company's business.388 Because the plaintiff's proposal involved issues of ethical and social significance and implicated "significant" levels of the company's sales, the court ordered the company to include the proposal in its proxy materials.389
The Lovenheim court's observation that the paté de foie gras proposal implicated "significant" levels of the company's sales is somewhat confusing; paté de foie gras accounted for $79,000 of the company's $141 million of annual revenue.390 While the court cautioned in a footnote that the proposal would have been excludable if the company did not import any paté de foie gras,391 Lovenheim suggests that even minimal participation in an activity may preclude reliance on the relevance exclusion in cases where the activity raises issues of ethical and social concern.
Before 2017, SEC staff's application of Rule 14a-8(i)(5) generally reflected this principle. In 1999, for example, SEC staff rejected a financial services company's effort to exclude a proposal advocating a policy against future purchases of tobacco stocks, even though tobacco stocks constituted less than 1% of the company's equity portfolio.392 Presumably, this decision was based on the significance of tobacco sales as a social issue. In contrast, SEC staff has granted no-action relief under Rule 14a-8(i)(5) in cases where a company does not engage in the activity that is the subject of a proposal. For example, in 2003, SEC staff allowed a consumer goods company to exclude a proposal recommending a policy against human embryonic stem cell research based on the company's representation that it does not perform such research.393
Since 2017, SEC staff's approach to the relevance exclusion has shifted back and forth with changes in presidential administration and SEC leadership. In 2017, the SEC's Division of Corporation Finance issued SLB 14I, which announced a broader view of the relevance exclusion than SEC staff had historically applied.394 SLB 14I observed that SEC staff had generally denied no-action relief under the relevance exclusion where a company conducted any business, no matter how small, related to an ethical or social issue raised by a proposal, even after the adoption of numerical tests for economic relevance in 1983.395 That approach, SLB 14I said, had "unduly limited the [relevance] exclusion's availability."396 Going forward, SLB 14I explained, SEC staff would adopt a more discerning approach when analyzing the relevance of social and ethical issues to a company's business.397 Under this framework, where a proposal's significance to a company's business is not apparent on its face, the proposal "may be excludable" unless the proponent demonstrates its significance—for example, with evidence that the proposal "may have a significant impact on ... segments of the issuer's business or subject the issuer to significant contingent liabilities."398 The "mere possibility of reputational or economic harm," however, would not preclude no-action relief.399
SEC staff's posture toward Rule 14a-8(i)(5) shifted yet again with a change in the SEC's composition after the 2020 presidential election. In 2021, SLB 14L rescinded SLB 14I and announced a return to SEC staff's "longstanding approach" of analyzing the relevance exclusion "in a manner ... consistent with Lovenheim v. Iroquois Brands, Ltd."400
After another change in SEC leadership, the pendulum swung back toward a broader view of the relevance exclusion. In 2025, SLB 14M rescinded SLB 14L and reinstated several of the key principles from SLB 14I.401
Rule 14a-8(i)(6) allows companies to exclude proposals that they lack the power or authority to implement.402 SEC staff have granted no-action relief under this exclusion where proposals would have required a company to violate the law or breach existing contracts.403 Other successful no-action requests under Rule 14a-8(i)(6) have involved proposals requesting action by separate legal entities that were not under the control of the company to which the proposals were submitted.404
Proposals calling for director independence requirements sometimes implicate Rule 14a-8(i)(6). Companies have sought to exclude some proposals advocating such requirements as beyond their power to implement based on two considerations. First, while a company's board nominates a slate of director candidates each year, directors are ultimately elected by shareholders.405 Second, directors may lose their independence as a result of changed circumstances outside of a board's control.406
SEC staff addressed these issues in SLB 14C, which explains that its analysis of director independence proposals under Rule 14a-8(i)(6) focuses primarily on whether a proposal "requires continued independence at all times."407 Under SLB 14C, proposals that would require directors to maintain their independence at all times are excludable as beyond a company's power to implement.408 In contrast, proposals that permit companies to cure a director's loss of independence are not automatically excludable under Rule 14a-8(i)(6).409 SLB 14C indicates that this approach is consistent with independence requirements in SEC regulations, which provide companies with an opportunity to cure a loss of independence.410
For companies incorporated in states where boards must obtain shareholder approval for charter amendments, Rule 14a-8(i)(6) allows the exclusion of proposals requesting or recommending that companies amend their charters in specified ways.411 Such proposals are also generally excludable under Rule 14a-8(i)(1) (the "improper subject" exclusion) and Rule 14a-8(i)(2) (the "violations of law" exclusion).412 In SLB 14D, however, the Division of Corporation Finance explained that proponents can avoid all three of these exclusions by requesting that the board "take the steps necessary" to amend a company's charter in particular ways.413 SEC staff usually allows proponents to redraft improper charter-amendment proposals along these lines.414
Rule 14a-8(i)(7) allows the exclusion of proposals that deal with a matter "relating to the company's ordinary business operations."415 The ordinary business exclusion (OBE) is grounded in "the policy of most state corporate laws," which "confine the resolution of ordinary business problems to management and the board of directors since it is impracticable for shareholders to decide how to solve such problems."416
The OBE has generated the most controversy of Rule 14a-8's substantive exclusions, playing a central role in disputes regarding E&S proposals.417 In recent years, the OBE has also often been the substantive basis for exclusion that companies most frequently assert and that SEC staff most frequently rely upon to grant no-action relief.418
Originally adopted in 1954,419 the OBE became the focal point for disputes regarding social policy proposals in the 1970s.420 In 1976, the SEC issued guidance on the OBE in response to concerns that the exclusion was being used to omit proposals that were important to shareholders.421 In that guidance, the SEC took the position that proposals involving issues with "significant policy, economic or other implications" cannot be omitted under the OBE.422 As an illustration, the SEC explained that a proposal recommending that a company not construct a nuclear power plant would not be excludable under the OBE in light of the important economic and safety considerations surrounding nuclear power plants.423 In the 1976 guidance, the SEC indicated that a company may omit a proposal under the OBE only if the proposal (1) involves "mundane" business matters, and (2) does not involve "any substantial policy or other considerations."424
The SEC has further explained that the policy underlying the OBE rests on "two central considerations."425
First, the OBE is based on the premise that certain tasks are "so fundamental to management's ability to run a company on a day-to-day basis that they could not, as a practical matter, be subject to direct shareholder oversight."426 As examples, the SEC has cited "management of the workforce, such as the hiring, promotion, and termination of employees, decisions on production quality and quantity, and the retention of suppliers."427 Proposals related to such matters are excludable under the OBE unless they involve "sufficiently significant social policy issues" that "transcend ... day-to-day business matters."428
Second, the OBE permits the omission of proposals that seek to "micromanage" a company, even if those proposals implicate significant policy questions.429 Proposals involving "intricate detail" or that seek to impose "specific time-frames or methods for implementing complex policies" may run afoul of this rule.430 The prohibition of micromanagement appears to be based in part on the D.C. Circuit's 1992 decision in Roosevelt v. E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co., which held that the OBE permitted a company to exclude a proposal requesting that it accelerate by one year a plan to phase out its production of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs).431 While the D.C. Circuit seemed to accept that the production of CFCs was a significant policy issue, it sided with the company because the proposal involved a minor difference in the timing of an existing management plan.432
There is no bright-line rule for determining whether an issue qualifies for the "significant policy" exception to the OBE. In analyzing that exception, SEC staff have appeared to give weight to media coverage, public debate, and legislative and regulatory activity regarding a subject matter.433 Over the years, SEC staff has changed its position on the "significant policy" exception's application to a range of topics, including plant closings, the sale of tobacco products, executive compensation, golden parachutes, and net neutrality.434 Some have attributed these types of changes to the subjectivity involved in determining whether a proposal implicates significant policy issues,435 while the SEC has emphasized the need to account for changed circumstances.436
One of the SEC's highest-profile reversals involving the shareholder proposal rule emerged from an effort to inject greater certainty into the OBE's application. As discussed, in 1992, SEC staff announced a categorical rule allowing the exclusion of all proposals concerning a company's employment policies and practices for the general workforce, even if such proposals implicated significant social issues.437 SEC staff adopted this position in granting a no-action request from Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, which sought to exclude a proposal requesting that the company implement a non-discrimination policy concerning sexual orientation.438 In granting the no-action request based on the OBE and announcing a new categorical rule, SEC staff contended that "the line between includable and excludable employment-related proposals based on social policy considerations has become increasingly difficult to draw."439 After the Cracker Barrel no-action letter received significant criticism,440 the SEC reversed course in 1998 and returned to a case-by-case approach of evaluating whether employment-related proposals qualify for the OBE's "significant policy" exception.441
As with the "relevance" exclusion, SEC staff's approach to the OBE has shifted with changes in presidential administration and the composition of the SEC. In 2019, SLB 14K endorsed a "company-specific" approach to the OBE's "significant policy" exception.442 Under that approach, SEC staff evaluate the relationship between a policy issue and a given company, as opposed to focusing "solely" on the policy issue's significance in the abstract.443 Accordingly, under the company-specific approach, a policy issue that is significant to one company may not be significant to another.444 For example, under SLB 14K, an energy company might be required to include a proposal involving climate change in its proxy materials, while a software company might be permitted to exclude an identical proposal.445
SLB 14K also discussed the micromanagement component of the OBE. Under SLB 14K's approach to micromanagement arguments, SEC staff "look to whether the proposal seeks intricate detail or imposes a specific strategy, method, action, outcome or timeline for addressing an issue, thereby supplanting the judgment of management and the board."446 Under this framework, proposals requesting that a company "consider, discuss the feasibility of, or evaluate the potential for a particular issue" generally do not constitute micromanagement.447 Proposals that involve specific timeframes or methods for implementing complex policies, however, may represent micromanagement under SLB 14K, even if they are drafted in precatory form.448
To illustrate this distinction, SLB 14K offered two examples from the previous proxy season. The first example—which SEC staff deemed to constitute micromanagement—requested that a company annually report on "short-, medium- and long-term greenhouse gas targets" aligned with the targets in the 2016 Paris Climate Agreement.449 SEC staff concluded that this proposal was excludable because it "effectively requir[ed] the adoption of time-bound targets (short, medium, and long) that the company would measure itself against," along with "changes in operations to meet those goals, thereby imposing a specific method for implementing a complex policy."450 In contrast, SEC staff denied no-action relief for a proposal requesting a report discussing if and how a company planned to reduce its contribution to climate change and "align its operations and investments" with the Paris Climate Agreement's goals.451 That proposal did not constitute micromanagement, according to SLB 14K, because it "deferred to management's discretion to consider if and how the company plans to reduce its carbon footprint."452
In 2021, SLB 14L—discussed above in connection with the "relevance" exclusion—rescinded SLB 14K.453 SLB 14L repudiated the company-specific approach to the OBE's "significant policy" exception, arguing that SLB 14K had drawn SEC staff into "factual considerations that do not advance the policy objectives" behind the OBE while failing to yield "consistent, predictable results."454 SLB 14L thus announced that SEC staff would "no longer focus on determining the nexus between a policy issue and the company" receiving a proposal, but "instead focus on the social policy significance of the issue" raised by the proposal.455
SLB 14L also rejected SLB 14K's framework for analyzing micromanagement, instead endorsing what it described as a "measured approach" to that issue.456 Specifically, SLB 14L explained that proposals "seeking detail or seeking to promote timeframes or methods" would not automatically run afoul of the OBE's prohibition of micromanagement.457 Rather, SLB 14L indicated that SEC staff would focus on the "level of granularity" a proposal seeks and "whether and to what extent it inappropriately limits discretion of the board or management."458
SLB 14L was widely viewed as reflecting a more favorable view of E&S proposals from SEC staff.459 The 2022 proxy season appeared to confirm this perception, as the success rate for no-action requests under the OBE—along with overall no-action success rates—plummeted to the lowest levels in decades amid a surge in E&S proposals.460 This shift moderated during the 2023 and 2024 proxy seasons, however, as no-action success rates climbed closer to pre-SLB 14L averages.461
In February 2025, after another change in the SEC's leadership, SLB 14M rescinded SLB 14L and announced a return to the company-specific approach to the OBE's "significant policy" exception.462 SLB 14M also reinstated SLB 14K's approach to micromanagement.463
Rule 14a-8(i)(8) permits companies to exclude proposals that
would disqualify a nominee who is standing for election;
would remove a director from office before his or her term expired;
question the competence, business judgment, or character of one or more nominees or directors;
seek to include a specific individual in the company's proxy materials for election to the board of directors; or
otherwise could affect the outcome of the upcoming election of directors.464
Earlier iterations of this exclusion were broader and served as a flashpoint in debates surrounding proxy access.465 While a detailed history of proxy access is beyond the scope of this report, some episodes in that narrative intersect with the history of the shareholder proposal rule and the election exclusion. For present purposes, the story begins in 2003, when the SEC declined to adopt a proposed rule that would have mandated proxy access in certain circumstances.466 In response, shareholder activists sought to promote proxy access via private ordering, relying on Rule 14a-8 to submit proxy access proposals at several companies.467 In 2006, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit held that an earlier version of the election exclusion—which allowed companies to exclude proposals that "relate[d] to" an election—did not bar proxy access proposals, contrary to the SEC's position at the time.468 A year later, however, the SEC amended the election exclusion to specifically prohibit proxy access proposals, functionally overturning the result of the Second Circuit's decision.469
In 2010, the SEC reversed course, adopting amendments to the proxy rules that (1) mandated proxy access for certain large long-term shareholders (Rule 14a-11), and (2) modified Rule 14a-8's election exclusion to permit proxy access proposals that did not conflict with Rule 14a-11.470 The 2010 amendment to the election exclusion thus allowed shareholders to submit proposals seeking proxy access regimes that were less restrictive than the mandatory floor established by Rule 14a-11—i.e., proxy access regimes with lower ownership thresholds for eligible shareholders, shorter holding period requirements, and/or higher limits on the number of director seats an eligible shareholder could seek to fill.471 (Rule 14a-11 was available to shareholders or groups of shareholders holding at least 3% of a company's voting power for at least three years and allowed eligible shareholders to nominate candidates for up to 25% of a company's board seats.472)
In its 2011 decision in Business Roundtable v. SEC, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit vacated Rule 14a-11.473 While the SEC has not attempted to issue another rule mandating proxy access, the 2010 amendment to the election exclusion remains in place, allowing shareholders to pursue proxy access through shareholder proposals.
The years following the Business Roundtable decision witnessed a flood of proxy access proposals, many of which received majority votes in their favor.474 Corporations generally proved responsive to these votes.475 As of 2024, 85% of S&P 500 companies had adopted some form of proxy access,476 compared to less than 1% in 2014.477 The evolution of the election exclusion thus highlights the shareholder proposal rule's potential role in facilitating governance changes and private ordering.
Rule 14a-8(i)(9) allows a company to exclude proposals that directly conflict with one of the company's own proposals to be submitted to shareholders at the same meeting.478 Like the election exclusion, Rule 14a-8(i)(9) has played a role in disputes regarding proxy access. In response to the wave of proxy access proposals discussed above, several corporations developed their own proxy access proposals.479 Some of these company proposals had more restrictive terms than those favored by shareholder activists—for example, higher ownership thresholds and/or longer holding period requirements.480 These differences raised a question: do proxy access proposals offered by shareholders "directly conflict" with more restrictive proxy access proposals offered by management, such that the shareholder proposals are excludable under Rule 14a-8(i)(9)?
While SEC staff initially deemed shareholder proxy access proposals excludable in these circumstances,481 it ultimately reached the opposite conclusion.482 In SLB 14H, SEC staff explained that a "direct conflict" exists under Rule 14a-8(i)(9) if a reasonable shareholder could not logically vote in favor of two proposals.483 Thus, if a company seeks shareholder approval of a merger at an annual meeting, a proposal asking shareholders to vote against the merger would be excludable.484 A "direct conflict" would not exist, however, where a "reasonable shareholder, although possibly preferring one proposal over the other, could logically vote for both."485 For example:
a shareholder proposal that would permit a shareholder or group of shareholders holding at least 3% of the company's outstanding stock for at least 3 years to nominate [for inclusion in the company's proxy statement] up to 20% of the directors would not be excludable if a management proposal would allow shareholders holding at least 5% of the company's stock for at least 5 years to nominate for inclusion in the company's proxy statement 10% of the directors.486
The shareholder proposal would not be excludable in these circumstances because the two proposals "generally seek a similar objective" and a reasonable shareholder could logically vote in favor of both proposals.487 SLB 14H's standard of logical inconsistency thus prevents companies from using Rule 14a-8(i)(9) to exclude shareholder proposals by introducing narrower proposals addressing the same subject.488
Rule 14a-8(i)(10) allows companies to exclude proposals that they have already "substantially implemented."489 A company may be able to rely on this exclusion even if its practices do not precisely mirror the terms of a proposal. Under SEC staff's longstanding approach, a determination that a company has "substantially implemented" a proposal depends on whether the company's policies, practices, and procedures "compare favorably" with those recommended by the proposal.490 Typically, this inquiry evaluates whether a company's existing policies or practices satisfy the "essential objective" of a proposal.491 While these tests depend heavily on the details of individual cases, commentators have made the following observations regarding SEC staff's administration of Rule 14a-8(i)(10):
SEC staff has generally concluded that a company's corporate governance policies addressing a given topic cannot "substantially implement" proposals requesting charter or bylaw amendments regarding that topic.492
In recent years, SEC staff has denied no-action relief under Rule 14a-8(i)(10) where a proposal requests that a company lower the ownership threshold at which shareholders may call a special meeting.493
SEC staff has generally granted no-action relief regarding proposals requesting that a company adopt a policy of submitting poison pills to a shareholder vote where the company's existing policy to that effect includes a "fiduciary out"—i.e., a clause lifting the vote requirement where directors determine that their fiduciary duties compel the adoption of a pill without a shareholder vote.494
SEC staff's approach to proxy access proposals under Rule 14a-8(i)(10) appears to have varied based on several considerations, including whether a company had adopted proxy access in response to a proposal, the nature of the proposed changes to an existing proxy access regime, and—in some cases—the level of detail that companies offered to bolster the claim that an existing proxy access regime "compared favorably" with a proposal.495
Rule 14a-8(i)(11) permits a company to exclude a proposal that substantially duplicates a proposal previously submitted to the company by another proponent that will be included in the company's proxy materials for the same meeting.496 In applying this exclusion, SEC staff have evaluated whether two proposals have the same "principal thrust" or "principal focus."497 Accordingly, the exclusion may be available even if two proposals addressing the same issue have different terms or breadth. For example, SEC staff has determined that a proposal requesting disclosures and an advisory shareholder vote on various aspects of a company's political contributions and communications "substantially duplicated" a proposal requesting that the company make no political contributions without supermajority shareholder approval.498 In that case, the company argued successfully that the proposals shared the same "principal thrust and focus"—providing a shareholder vote on political expenditures—even though one proposal was broader than the other.499
Rule 14a-8(i)(11) does not allow companies to choose which of two duplicative proposals to include in their proxy materials. For Rule 14a-8(i)(11) to apply, a company must include the previously submitted proposal in its proxy materials.500
Rule 14a-8(i)(12) allows a company to exclude proposals that address substantially the same subject matter as a proposal included in the company's proxy materials within the preceding five calendar years if the most recent vote occurred within the preceding three calendar years and the most recent vote was
less than 5% of the votes cast if previously voted on once;
less than 15% of the votes cast if previously voted on twice; or
less than 25% of the votes cast if previously voted on three or more times.501
The SEC adopted these thresholds as part of a package of 2020 amendments to the shareholder proposal rule.502 The 2020 amendments raised the exclusion's previous thresholds for resubmitted proposals (3%, 6%, and 10%) based on a concern that those thresholds were not effectively screening proposals that were unlikely to garner significant shareholder support.503
Rule 14a-8(i)(13) allows companies to exclude proposals that relate to specific amounts of cash or stock dividends.504 While SEC staff has granted no-action relief under this exclusion for proposals recommending a specific formula for determining dividends,505 it has denied no-action relief for proposals requesting that a company increase or begin paying a dividend.506
As previous sections of this report have explained, the future of the shareholder proposal rule is uncertain.507 In addition to announcing a new approach to precatory proposals, SEC Chairman Paul Atkins has said that the agency should reevaluate the rule's "fundamental premise" that shareholders "should be able to force companies to solicit for their proposals" at little or no personal expense.508 The SEC's regulatory flexibility agenda suggests that the SEC may propose amendments to the rule in the spring of 2026.509
Congress is also considering a range of legislative proposals that would affect the shareholder proposal ecosystem. This final section of the report discusses proposals that would reform the shareholder proposal rule itself, those that would regulate institutional voting on shareholder proposals, and those that would regulate proxy advisors. Before reviewing the relevant legislation, however, the report outlines the primary justifications that have been offered for the shareholder proposal rule, along with the main criticisms that have been leveled against it.
Supporters of the shareholder proposal rule have argued that the rule (1) promotes corporate social responsibility, (2) encourages value-enhancing governance reforms, (3) facilitates the production and dissemination of valuable information, and (4) preserves process values associated with "corporate democracy." Critics of the current shareholder proposal regime have challenged each of these claims, in addition to contending that the rule results in costly distractions for corporate management.
Some observers tout the shareholder proposal rule as an important tool for encouraging corporations to engage in socially responsible behavior.510 As earlier sections of this report detail, E&S proposals have played a central role in the rule's history.511 While E&S proposals rarely obtained significant shareholder support before the 21st century, activists championed the proposal process as a means of drawing attention to E&S issues and pressuring corporations to implement suggested reforms.512 In the 2010s and 2020s, E&S proposals gained greater traction, with some E&S proposals garnering majority votes and many corporations entering settlements with proposal proponents.513
The social responsibility justification for the shareholder proposal rule raises a question: why do shareholders—who presumably buy shares to earn a financial return—concern themselves with E&S issues? The theoretical literature offers three possible answers. First, shareholders may care about things other than maximizing their wealth.514 Accordingly, shareholders may be willing to sacrifice some level of financial return to promote non-pecuniary objectives such as a clean environment or income equality.515 This report will refer to this approach to E&S proposals as "concessionary" activism.516 Second, shareholders may believe that companies that act in socially responsible ways perform better over the long term than those that do not.517 This theory is often called "enlightened shareholder value" (ESV).518 Third, diversified shareholders may want companies to act in socially responsible ways to maximize the value of their portfolios.519 Proponents of this view—sometimes labeled "portfolio primacy"—argue that most shareholders are highly diversified, meaning their stock wealth depends on the value of the overall equity market or some close approximation of it.520 As a result, these commentators contend, actions that decrease the value of individual companies within a portfolio—for example, costly efforts to reduce negative externalities or increase positive externalities—may increase shareholder wealth by maximizing the value of diversified portfolios.521
The concessionary and portfolio primacy rationales for E&S activism have generated controversy. While proposal sponsors rarely state explicitly that their proposals are motivated by concessionary objectives,522 critics argue that many E&S proposals pursue non-pecuniary goals at the expense of shareholder value.523 Recent years have also witnessed a resurgence of debates over whether corporate managers should seek to maximize shareholder value (with non-shareholder interests receiving only instrumental consideration) or attempt to balance the interests of shareholders with those of other constituencies.524 Legislation in the 115th Congress, for example, would have required the directors of certain large corporations to "balance[] the pecuniary interests of the shareholders ... with the best interests of persons that are materially affected by" a covered corporation's conduct.525 Concessionary defenses of E&S activism thus remain influential even if proposal sponsors usually avoid justifying E&S proposals on concessionary grounds for legal or strategic reasons.
One objection to concessionary activism involves the role of institutional intermediaries in shareholder voting. As discussed, institutional investors such as mutual funds and pension funds have the capacity to play a decisive role in the outcome of many proposal votes.526 Some commentators have argued that it is illegitimate (and potentially a breach of fiduciary duty) for institutional investors to vote based on concessionary objectives not shared by all of their clients or beneficiaries.527 Some writers also contend that, even if concessionary votes by intermediaries can be legitimate in principle, the legitimacy of such votes depends on the extent to which they reflect the actual preferences of an intermediary's clients or beneficiaries.528 It is unclear whether institutional votes on E&S proposals reflect those preferences. These types of concerns underpin suggestions to require mutual funds to offer pass-through voting, which are discussed below.529
Whether concessionary conduct by corporate directors constitutes a breach of fiduciary duty is a longstanding debate within corporate law. This report cannot review that dispute exhaustively, but will highlight certain general principles that have emerged from it. Many states, but not Delaware, have adopted "constituency" statutes that allow directors to consider the interests of non-shareholder constituencies in making certain types of business decisions.530 Scholars have debated whether these statutes permit directors to harm shareholder interests to benefit other constituencies.531 There is little case law addressing that issue.532
While there was once a vibrant debate over whether Delaware law allows corporate directors to sacrifice shareholder interests to benefit non-shareholders,533 recent Delaware Chancery Court decisions are explicit in declaring such conduct impermissible.534 The Delaware Supreme Court's seminal Revlon decision also explained that boards may confer benefits on non-shareholder constituencies only insofar as doing so is "rationally related" to the promotion of shareholder interests.535 The relevant portions of these decisions, however, address the applicable standard of conduct; the standard of review that courts use to determine whether directors met the standard of conduct varies based on the context.536 The default standard of review in Delaware corporate law is the business judgment rule, which affords broad deference to informed, good-faith decisions made by unconflicted directors.537 Unless a plaintiff rebuts one of those elements, Delaware courts "merely look[] to see whether the business decision made was rational in the sense of being one logical approach to advancing the corporation's objectives."538 As a practical matter, the business judgment rule gives directors considerable scope to confer benefits on non-shareholder constituencies as long as doing so bears some rationally conceivable relationship to long-term shareholder value.539 This deferential standard of review, however, does not change the applicable standard of conduct, which allows directors to advance non-shareholder interests only to the extent that directors believe those interests are consistent with shareholder value.540 If directors admit to sacrificing shareholder interests to benefit non-shareholders, Delaware courts are likely to conclude that they have breached their fiduciary duty of loyalty.541 While these types of "confessional" cases are extremely rare, they have resulted in findings that fiduciaries acted unlawfully.542
Portfolio primacy has been criticized on practical and legal grounds. On a practical level, critics have doubted that institutional investors have the ability to evaluate the complex inter-firm tradeoffs that portfolio primacy contemplates.543 Others have argued that efforts by mutual fund managers to reduce negative externalities produced by their portfolio companies are unlikely to eliminate those externalities.544 Mutual fund sponsors may, for example, have difficulty altering the behavior of privately held companies, public companies with a controlling shareholder, or foreign state-owned companies, which may increase their output (along with the associated negative externalities) if non-controlled public companies accede to shareholder demands for costly mitigation measures.545
Portfolio primacy may also face legal difficulties. For mutual fund sponsors, portfolio primacy may raise fiduciary conflicts. Large mutual fund sponsors operate many different funds with different portfolios.546 A fund sponsor might, for example, offer both an S&P 500 index fund and a fund that tracks the energy companies within the S&P 500. In these cases, a fund sponsor owes independent fiduciary duties to each fund;547 its obligation "runs not to all of [its] clients in the aggregate, but to each client individually."548 Portfolio primacy, however, prescribes that asset managers encourage measures that may reduce the value of some companies to increase the value of others.549 If such measures harm some of a sponsor's funds—for example, because those funds overweight harmed companies relative to a market benchmark—the sponsor may be precluded from voting the shares held by those funds in favor of the relevant measures.550
Delaware law may also prohibit corporate directors from implementing portfolio primacy. In 2024, the Delaware Chancery Court held in McRitchie v. Zuckerberg that the fiduciary duties of corporate directors are "firm-specific"—i.e., owed to shareholders in their capacity as shareholders of particular firms but not in other capacities, such as diversified investors.551 While the question at issue in McRitchie was whether fiduciaries breached their duties by taking actions that allegedly harmed shareholders in their capacity as diversified investors, the decision also suggests it is impermissible for directors to intentionally sacrifice firm-specific value to benefit diversified investors.552 Accordingly, while the business judgment rule gives directors expansive discretion to mitigate negative externalities produced by their companies and thereby improve the performance of the overall stock market, Delaware courts are likely to evaluate whether such measures are rationally related to the long-term value of the particular companies that directors serve.553 Directors who concededly sacrifice firm-specific profits to maximize the value of diversified portfolios would likely violate Delaware law based on the Delaware Chancery Court's reasoning in McRitchie.
Unlike concessionary and portfolio-based justifications for E&S proposals, ESV arguments embrace the traditional goal of firm-specific shareholder value maximization. Disputes regarding ESV arguments thus involve disagreements over the best means of achieving that goal or allegations that ESV arguments are being offered as subterfuge to conceal other motivations.554 Critics of the shareholder proposal regime have argued that E&S proposals generally do not contribute to shareholder value and needlessly embroil companies in social and political controversies.555
Some commentators have argued that the shareholder proposal rule has played an important role in catalyzing value-enhancing corporate governance reforms.556 As discussed, Rule 14a-8 has been instrumental in encouraging many companies to de-stagger their boards, adopt majority voting for uncontested director elections, and implement proxy access.557 Shareholder proposals also served as a staging ground for say-on-pay until its codification in 2010.558
Skeptics of the shareholder proposal rule question whether these reforms have in fact improved shareholder value.559 A related concern is that proposals, coupled with pressure from institutional investors and proxy advisors, have caused companies to adopt "one-size-fits-all" governance arrangements that may not be appropriate for particular firms.560 Some critics have also argued that shareholder proposals produce costs that must be weighed against any financial benefits, including legal costs, the opportunity costs associated with management distraction, and the SEC's administrative costs in reviewing and responding to no-action requests.561
Another family of justifications for the shareholder proposal rule involves the rule's role in producing and disseminating information. Some supporters of the rule contend that proposal votes may improve corporate decision-making by aggregating private information held by shareholders and transmitting that information to management.562 Other arguments emphasize the benefits of forcing management to articulate its reasons for opposing proposals, which may prompt closer examination of the relevant issues.563 One of the original justifications for the shareholder proposal rule was rooted in disclosure—specifically, the notion that it is misleading for companies to fail to disclose matters they know will be raised at an annual meeting.564
Critics of the shareholder proposal rule have responded to information-based justifications by arguing that shareholders—who typically lack the business acumen and industry expertise of corporate executives—generally do not have valuable information to contribute to corporate decision-making.565 Forcing management to respond to shareholder proposals, they contend, amounts to a costly disruption that diverts attention from other matters.566
At one point, opponents of the shareholder proposal rule responded to disclosure-based justifications by contending that proposals were not material to shareholders.567 This categorical argument appears to have fallen by the wayside as certain types of proposals gained significant support in the 1980s and 1990s.568 After these developments, some critics of the shareholder proposal regime advocated reforms to screen out and deter proposals they deemed immaterial, as opposed to outright repeal of the rule.569
The shareholder proposal rule is often celebrated as a vindication of "corporate democracy."570 On this view, consultation with shareholders can "make management decisions more 'legitimate' if a weak form of democratic theory is applied and the public corporation is considered as a social institution."571 This legitimacy could derive from shareholders' role as corporate "owners,"572 or from the "expressive interests" that arise as a result of shareholders' "essential role in the corporation."573
Other commentators have argued that advocates of corporate democracy commit a category error.574 Corporations, these commentators contend, are not democracies, nor should they be.575 Skeptics of corporate democracy argue that the hierarchical, board-centric governance model reflected in corporate law is responsible for the success of the corporate form.576 Efforts to democratize corporations, they maintain, threaten to erode that model and reduce economic efficiency.577 It is also unclear how literal arguments based on corporate democracy are intended to be. Democratic principles could plausibly support a wide range of governance reforms, including a one-vote-per-shareholder rule (as opposed to one vote per share) and voting rights for employees and other constituencies affected by corporate activities.578 Accordingly, justifications for the shareholder proposal rule grounded in the intrinsic value of democratic procedures may commit proponents to more far-reaching changes to corporate governance.
The concerns with shareholder proposals discussed throughout this report have prompted a variety of suggestions to reform various aspects of the proposal regime. The following subsections discuss reform options that focus on Rule 14a-8, institutional proxy voting, and proxy advisors.
Some reform proposals target the shareholder proposal rule itself. This subsection reviews bills in the 118th and 119th Congresses that would change elements of Rule 14a-8, along with suggestions to tighten the rule's eligibility requirements and allow companies to adopt their own proposal procedures and standards.
In the 119th Congress, H.R. 52, the Stop Woke Investing Act, would adopt limits on the number of proposals companies are required to include in their proxy materials for a given meeting.579 The limits would vary based on a company's size.580 Companies would be permitted to develop their own methods for determining which proposals to include in their proxy materials in cases where the number of submitted proposals exceeds the relevant limit.581 The bill also would allow companies to exclude proposals that do not have a material effect on their financial performance.582
The 118th Congress considered several bills that would have reformed various aspects of the shareholder proposal rule. Those bills are summarized below.
less than 10% of votes cast if the proposal was voted on once during such five-year period (up from 5% in the current rule);
less than 20% of votes cast if the proposal was voted on twice during such five-year period (up from 15% in the current rule); or
less than 40% of votes cast if the proposal was voted on three or more times during such five-year period (up from 25% in the current rule).586
A broader corporate governance bill in the 118th Congress—H.R. 4767, the Protecting Americans' Retirement Savings from Politics Act—would have included all of the above measures except for H.R. 4655's repeal of the shareholder proposal rule.591 In September 2024, the House of Representatives passed the Protecting Americans' Retirement Savings from Politics Act as part of H.R. 4790, the Prioritizing Economic Growth Over Woke Policies Act, which also included a provision that would have repealed the shareholder proposal rule altogether.592
Some commentators have proposed tightening the shareholder proposal rule's eligibility requirements.593 Such changes could involve raising the ownership thresholds for proposal proponents, lengthening the required holding periods, or both.594
The SEC has explained that Rule 14a-8's eligibility requirements are intended to ensure that proposal proponents "have a meaningful economic stake or investment interest in a company before [they] may draw on company resources to require the inclusion of a proposal in the company's proxy statement."595 Rule 14a-8's critics have for some time voiced concerns about the role that a handful of individual proposal proponents play in corporate governance.596 One study has found that, between 2003 and 2014, five individuals were responsible for 27% of all shareholder proposals submitted to S&P 1500 companies.597 In 2023, five individuals submitted approximately 55% of all proposals.598
Whether these figures evince misuse of the proposal process has been the subject of debate. Some have argued that individual proponents use proposals to pursue personal agendas unrelated to shareholder value.599 Others have responded that the most active individual proponents focus primarily on core governance issues and that their proposals tend to enjoy relatively high levels of shareholder support.600
Another option for shareholder proposal reform would involve explicitly authorizing companies to adopt their own proposal procedures and standards. This type of private-ordering approach could involve minimum requirements specified by the SEC or allow companies to opt out of the shareholder proposal rule altogether.601 As discussed, the SEC contemplated the former possibility in its 1982 proposed amendments to Rule 14a-8, but ultimately declined to adopt such changes.602
Suggestions to allow private ordering of shareholder proposals raise questions regarding whether—and the extent to which—companies can adopt their own procedural requirements and substantive standards for shareholder proposals under existing law. In a 2023 speech, SEC Commissioner Mark Uyeda said that Rule 14a-8's "procedural bases for exclusion"—including the rule's ownership and holding-period requirements—"should be viewed as default standards that apply only if companies decline to establish their own standards in their governing documents."603 Commissioner Uyeda based this conclusion on the proposition that Rule 14a-8 is intended to facilitate shareholders' ability to exercise their state law governance rights—not to create governance rights that do not exist under state law.604 Accordingly, Commissioner Uyeda argued, disputes regarding the propriety of a company's procedural restrictions on shareholder proposals should be resolved by state courts based on state corporate law—not by the SEC.605 In October 2025, SEC Chairman Paul Atkins endorsed Commissioner Uyeda's view that federal law does not preclude companies from adopting their own procedural rules for shareholder proposals.606
While the aforementioned remarks from Commissioner Uyeda and Chairman Atkins address only "procedural" rules, some commentators have argued that existing law likely permits companies to adopt substantive limits on shareholder proposals beyond those in Rule 14a-8.607 Like Commissioner Uyeda, these writers rely on the premise that Rule 14a-8 does not preempt state law by creating new substantive rights for shareholders to present and vote on proposals.608 Rather, in their view, Rule 14a-8 provides shareholders with a federal right to include a proposal in a company's proxy materials only if shareholders have an independent right to present the proposal under applicable state law.609 These commentators further contend that a range of substantive restrictions on precatory shareholder proposals would likely be facially valid under Delaware law given Delaware's strong preference for contractual freedom and private ordering.610 Thus, under this line of reasoning, neither federal law nor Delaware law prevents companies from adopting substantive limits on precatory shareholder proposals that are more restrictive than Rule 14a-8's substantive exclusions.611
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit's 1947 decision in SEC v. Transamerica Corp. looms in the background of discussions regarding private ordering and shareholder proposals.612 In Transamerica, the Third Circuit held that a corporation was required to include certain proposals in its proxy materials notwithstanding a corporate bylaw (Bylaw 47) that effectively gave management the authority to decide whether to submit bylaw-amendment proposals for a shareholder vote.613 The case involved several proposals, some of which were bylaw amendments.614 The Third Circuit held that all of the proposals were proper subjects for shareholder action under Delaware law even though management sought to exclude some of the proposals pursuant to Bylaw 47.615 In reaching this conclusion, the court appeared to hold that Bylaw 47, when applied "in all its strictness," was invalid under Delaware law because the DGCL grants shareholders the power to amend bylaws.616 While this holding was sufficient to resolve the case, the court proceeded to explain that, even if Bylaw 47 was valid as a matter of Delaware law, the bylaw could not be used to circumvent Section 14(a) of the Exchange Act and Congress's intent to "require fair opportunity for the operation of corporate suffrage."617
Scholars have disagreed about the implications of the latter aspect of the Transamerica decision. Some have read Transamerica's language regarding circumvention of congressional intent to mean that federal law precludes companies from adopting limits on shareholder proposals beyond those in Rule 14a-8.618 Others have argued that the relevant language was nonbinding dicta and that a broad reading of that passage would be difficult to square with principles of corporate law federalism reflected in more recent appellate decisions.619 Accordingly, these writers contend, Transamerica should not be interpreted as barring companies from adopting limits on shareholder proposals in their charters or bylaws.620
The shareholder proposal rule owes much of its significance to the growth and increased engagement of institutional investors since the 1980s.621 The heightened influence of institutional investors has not, however, been without controversy. While corporate law has long focused on issues arising from the separation of ownership and control of operating companies, divergences between the interests of institutional investors and their beneficiaries generate an additional layer of agency costs.622
One concern along these lines is the claim that mutual fund sponsors do not engage in enough value-enhancing shareholder activism and stewardship activities.623 Theoretical arguments to this effect emphasize the business relationships between fund sponsors and corporate management, in addition to fee structures that allow mutual fund sponsors to capture only a small fraction of the benefits that activism and stewardship would produce.624 Because of the incentives that result from these arrangements, some argue, mutual fund sponsors are unlikely to engage in the level of activism and stewardship that would be optimal from the perspective of fund beneficiaries.625
Another concern in the literature is that institutional investors may support E&S proposals that seek to promote non-pecuniary values not shared by all their beneficiaries.626 Some scholars have suggested that mutual fund sponsors might support such proposals to market themselves to millennial investors,627 implement the personal views of their executives,628 or as part of an effort to please government officials and forestall regulation.629 The largest fund sponsors have rejected these assertions; they claim to evaluate shareholder proposals based on considerations of long-term shareholder value.630
Some analysts have focused their criticism of institutional voting on the influence that the leading proxy advisors—ISS and Glass Lewis—allegedly have on institutional voting decisions. These observers claim that many small and mid-size institutions vote in lockstep with ISS and Glass Lewis recommendations without performing independent analysis—a practice dubbed "robovoting."631
To address some of the concerns with institutional voting discussed above, commentators have proposed a requirement that certain mutual funds offer "pass-through" voting to their investors—i.e., allow fund investors to direct the voting of the fund's proxies.632 The "Big Three" index fund managers—BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street Global Advisors—have all experimented with pass-through voting, offering it as an option for certain funds.633 These pass-through arrangements have allowed investors to direct the voting of shares in accordance with plans developed by proxy advisors.634 State Street, for example, allows investors in eligible funds to direct the voting of shares in accordance with board recommendations, the proxy advisor ISS's benchmark recommendations, or various specialized policies developed by ISS, including a "Sustainability Policy," a "Socially Responsible Investment Policy," and a "Catholic Faith-Based Policy."635
Pass-through voting has also attracted congressional interest. In the 119th Congress, S. 1670, the Investor Democracy is Expected Act or INDEX Act, would require investment advisers that control more than 1% of a company's voting securities to vote proxies held by the advisers' passively managed funds in accordance with the instructions of fund investors, subject to certain exceptions.636 It is not clear whether the types of pass-through programs offered by the Big Three—which allow investors to direct fund proxy voting in accordance with proxy advisor plans—would satisfy this requirement. The legislation could be construed to require "pure" pass-through voting in which fund investors can vote on individual proposals directly.637
Skeptics of pure pass-through voting argue that most fund investors would be unlikely to vote their shares under such a system, citing the low voting rates of retail investors who own shares directly.638 Under a pure pass-through system, an investor in an S&P 500 index fund would be presented with hundreds of proposals every year, which would likely take significant time to read and analyze.639 If predictions of low investor participation proved correct, mandatory pass-through voting could potentially sacrifice the monitoring benefits of institutional ownership without major improvement in the degree to which fund proxy votes mirror the preferences of fund beneficiaries.640
The pass-through programs offered by the Big Three have been criticized for failing to give retail investors a sufficiently broad selection of voting plans and offering limited guidance about how the available plans intend to vote.641 Policymakers concerned with the concentration of power in large institutions may also be unsatisfied by a voting regime that shifts power from mutual fund sponsors to ISS and Glass Lewis.
Several bills in recent Congresses have sought to address other aspects of institutional proxy voting, including the "best interest" standard governing proxy voting by investment advisers and the ways in which institutions use proxy voting advice.642 Those bills are discussed below.
In the 118th Congress, H.R. 4767, the Protecting Americans' Retirement Savings from Politics Act (discussed earlier), would have included all the above measures.649
Another category of possible reforms to the shareholder proposal regime would regulate proxy advisors directly. This subsection of the report provides background on previous efforts to regulate proxy advisors, discusses a December 2025 executive order targeting proxy advisors, and reviews proposed legislation concerning proxy advisors.
As discussed, proxy advisors first emerged in the 1980s with the beginnings of institutional activism.650 They gained prominence in the 21st century, particularly after the SEC adopted rules governing proxy voting by mutual funds in 2003.651 As shareholder proposals began to exert a greater influence in boardrooms, the role that proxy advisors play in corporate governance became increasingly controversial. Critics of the industry have raised a variety of concerns, which are summarized below.652
Outsized Influence
Some observers argue that the leading proxy advisors—ISS and Glass Lewis—have an inappropriate level of influence on corporate America.653 This influence, they contend, is in part a result of the highly concentrated structure of the proxy advisor industry.654 ISS and Glass Lewis reportedly have a combined market share exceeding 90%, with some estimates reaching 97%.655 The three other U.S. proxy advisors—Egan-Jones Proxy Services, Segal Marco Advisors, and ProxyVote Plus—are considerably smaller.656 As discussed, some commentators have also criticized the way in which institutional investors utilize proxy voting advice, claiming that many small and mid-size institutions follow proxy advisor recommendations without conducting independent analysis.657
The level of influence that proxy advisors have on shareholder votes is contested, with empirical studies reaching differing conclusions.658 In evaluating the effect of a proxy advisor recommendation, it can be difficult to distinguish correlation from causation. When casting votes, institutional investors may be independently influenced by the same factors that drive proxy advisors' analyses.659 In addition, proxy advisors develop their voting policies based on input from their institutional clients,660 while institutions may select a given advisor based on prior agreement with the advisor's policies.661 These factors complicate efforts to assess the causal significance of proxy advisor recommendations.662
Defenders of the proxy advisor industry claim that critics overstate its influence. They argue that the largest institutional investors have their own voting policies and conduct independent analysis of contested issues,663 relying on proxy advisors primarily for research and to identify matters that warrant further examination.664
Conflicts of Interest
Some commentators argue that ISS and Glass Lewis operate with conflicts of interest because they provide both proxy voting advice to investors and consulting services to corporations that are the subject of their proxy voting advice.665 Critics have claimed that the proxy advisors' voting recommendations may be influenced by whether a corporation has purchased their consulting services.666 Glass Lewis also offers to engage with companies on behalf of investor clients regarding governance issues,667 which observers say incentivizes the firm to favor activist investors that purchase its engagement services.668
ISS and Glass Lewis indicate that they maintain structural safeguards to ensure the independence of their proxy advice and consulting businesses.669 Both firms also say they disclose potential conflicts of interest to their clients.670
Errors
A third category of concerns regarding proxy advisors involves alleged errors in their work product. Some commentators contend that ISS and Glass Lewis frequently make factual and analytical mistakes and are insufficiently responsive when companies attempt to correct such errors.671 (In 2020, ISS discontinued a policy of allowing S&P 500 companies to review draft copies of its research reports.672 Glass Lewis allows companies to respond to its analysis and recommendations and makes those responses available to clients.673)
The industry's defenders contend that claims of analytical error often amount to disputes over methodology or policy and that proxy advisors' work exhibits low rates of factual error.674
Environmental and Social Agendas
ISS and Glass Lewis have been criticized for supporting shareholder proposals on E&S issues that allegedly harm shareholder value.675 To address this concern, a 2024 staff report from the House Committee on Financial Services recommended that proxy advisors be required to "disclose their economic analysis and provide financial justifications" for vote recommendations that diverge from the judgments of independent boards of directors.676 ISS and Glass Lewis have also faced investigations from state attorneys general (AGs) involving the role that E&S considerations play in their recommendations.677
Both ISS and Glass Lewis have said that their benchmark voting policies evaluate E&S proposals based on how the proposals are likely to contribute to shareholder value.678 ISS has also made changes to its benchmark voting policy for certain types of E&S proposals. ISS's 2026 benchmark proxy voting policy indicates that ISS will take a case-by-case approach to proposals involving climate change, diversity, human rights, and corporate political contributions.679 Previous ISS benchmark policies said that ISS would generally recommend voting in favor of certain types of proposals within those categories.680
The SEC's Effort to Regulate Proxy Advisors
For many years, the regulatory status of proxy advisors was uncertain. Section 14(a) of the Exchange Act makes it unlawful to "solicit" proxies in contravention of SEC rules, but does not define the term "solicit."681 Since 1956, the SEC has defined that term to include not only requests to execute or revoke a proxy, but also any communications to shareholders "under circumstances reasonably calculated to result in" the procurement, withholding, or revocation of a proxy.682 The SEC has recognized the breadth of this definition and adopted various exemptions to the proxy rules' information and filing requirements to mitigate its expansiveness.683 Those exemptions include carveouts for persons who do not seek proxy authority and persons who furnish proxy voting advice under specified circumstances.684 Proxy advisors have relied upon both of these exemptions. ISS and Glass Lewis have also argued that they are not subject to any of the SEC's proxy rules because proxy voting advice does not constitute proxy "solicitation" under Section 14(a) of the Exchange Act.685
In a 2020 final rule, the SEC rejected this argument and codified its view that selling proxy voting advice generally constitutes proxy "solicitation," bringing proxy advisors within the ambit of the proxy rules.686 The 2020 rule also imposed conditions on the availability of certain exemptions from the proxy rules' information and filing requirements.687 Specifically, the 2020 amendments provided that proxy advisors could rely on the relevant exemptions only if they (1) made specified conflict-of-interest disclosures, and (2) allowed companies to review their voting recommendations and informed clients of company responses.688
ISS challenged the 2020 rule, arguing that disinterested proxy voting advice does not constitute proxy "solicitation" under Section 14(a) of the Exchange Act.689 In February 2024, a federal district court agreed and vacated the rule.690 In July 2025, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit affirmed that decision.691
Because of the D.C. Circuit's decision, any future SEC efforts to regulate proxy advisors would, absent legislative changes, need to rely on authorities other than Section 14(a) of the Exchange Act. One possible alternative to Section 14(a) is the Investment Advisers Act (IAA), which establishes federal fiduciary standards for investment advisers.692 Three of the five U.S. proxy advisors, including ISS, are registered with the SEC as investment advisers.693 While Glass Lewis has traditionally maintained that it is not subject to the IAA,694 a company executive said in November 2025 that Glass Lewis is "seriously considering" registering with the SEC as an investment adviser.695
In December 2025, President Trump signed Executive Order 14366, Protecting American Investors from Foreign-Owned and Politically-Motivated Proxy Advisors (E.O. 14366).696 E.O. 14366 included many of the criticisms of proxy advisors discussed above and indicated that "the United States must ... increase oversight of and take action to restore public confidence in the proxy advisor industry, including by promoting accountability, transparency, and competition."697 The order also issued a variety of instructions to the heads of the SEC, Federal Trade Commission (FTC), and Department of Labor.698 E.O. 14366 directs the Chairman of the SEC to
review all rules, regulations, guidance, bulletins, and memoranda relating to proxy advisors and consider revising or rescinding those that are "inconsistent with the purpose of this order, especially to the extent that they implicate [DEI] and [ESG] policies";699
consider revising or rescinding all rules, regulations, guidance, bulletins, and memoranda relating to shareholder proposals, including Rule 14a-8, that are "inconsistent with the purpose of this order";700
enforce the federal securities laws' anti-fraud provisions with respect to material misstatements or omissions contained in proxy advisors' voting recommendations;701
assess whether to require proxy advisors whose activities fall within the scope of the IAA to register as investment advisers;702
consider requiring proxy advisors to provide increased transparency on their recommendations, methodology, and conflicts of interest, especially regarding DEI and ESG factors;703
analyze whether, and under what circumstances, a proxy advisor serves as a vehicle for investment advisers to coordinate and augment their voting decisions, resulting in the formation of a "group" for purposes of Sections 13(d)(3) and 13(g)(3) of the Exchange Act;704 and
direct SEC staff to examine whether the practice of registered investment advisers engaging proxy advisors to advise on (and following the recommendations of such proxy advisors with respect to) non-pecuniary factors in investing—including, as appropriate, DEI and ESG factors—is inconsistent with investment advisers' fiduciary duties.705
E.O. 14366 instructs the Chairman of the FTC to investigate whether proxy advisors engage in unfair methods of competition or unfair or deceptive acts or practices in violation of the Federal Trade Commission Act.706 It directs the Secretary of Labor to consider revisions to regulations and guidance under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, which governs the fiduciary duties of private pension plan sponsors.707
In the 118th Congress, H.R. 4767, the Protecting Americans' Retirement Savings from Politics Act (discussed above), included the anti-fraud measure from H.R. 4590 and the requirements from H.R. 4589.715
The attractiveness of some of the reforms discussed above is likely to depend on one's normative priors—in particular, which justifications for the shareholder proposal rule (if any) one deems persuasive. Those who believe that Rule 14a-8 plays an important role in promoting corporate social responsibility, for example, may not favor reforms designed to restrict or eliminate E&S proposals. Conversely, those concerned that the costs of E&S proposals exceed the benefits may support such reforms.
One consideration raised by several of the relevant legislative options is the desirability of mandatory rules regarding shareholder proposals. Corporate law scholars have long debated the optimal mix of mandatory and default rules.716 Some scholars argue that corporations should have close to unfettered freedom to adopt governance arrangements tailored to their unique circumstances.717 Others contend that certain mandatory rules are necessary to address market failures.718 Related debates involve the appropriate content of corporate law default rules and the processes by which corporations should be allowed to opt out of such rules.719 Different positions in these disputes have different implications for shareholder proposal reform. Proponents of expansive contractual freedom, for example, may favor allowing corporations to adopt their own proposal procedures and standards. Skeptics of managerial power, in contrast, may support a core set of mandatory rules or a requirement that shareholders approve decisions to opt out of default rules.
In considering possible reforms to Rule 14a-8, Congress may seek to shine a light on the legal architecture underpinning shareholder proposals. As discussed, there is lingering uncertainty over whether federal law gives shareholders a right to submit proposals or merely imposes disclosure obligations that depend on the existence of state law proposal rights. While the SEC's current chairman has endorsed the latter view,720 recent history confirms that the agency's approach to shareholder proposals can change based on its leadership.
| 1. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8 (2025). |
| 2. |
See infra "Governance Proposals" and "Environmental and Social Proposals." |
| 3. |
J. Robert Brown, Jr., The Evolving Role of Rule 14a-8 in the Corporate Governance Process, 93 Denver L. Rev. Online 151, 151 (2016). |
| 4. |
Lawrence Cunningham, Restore Corporate Discipline by Reining in Shareholder Proposals, Bloomberg Law (Oct. 27, 2025), https://news.bloomberglaw.com/legal-exchange-insights-and-commentary/restore-corporate-discipline-by-reining-in-shareholder-proposals. |
| 5. |
Proxy Power and Proposal Abuse: Reforming Rule 14a-8 to Protect Shareholder Value, Hearing Before the H. Comm. on Fin. Servs., 119th Cong. (2025); The Proxy Advisor Duopoly's Anticompetitive Conduct, Hearing Before the H. Comm. on the Judiciary, Subcomm. on the Admin. State, Regul. Reform & Antitrust, 119th Cong. (2025); Exposing the Proxy Advisory Cartel: How ISS and Glass Lewis Influence Markets, Hearing Before the H. Comm. on Fin. Servs., Subcomm. on Cap. Mkts., 119th Cong. (2025). |
| 6. |
Exec. Order 14,366, 90 Fed. Reg. 58503 (Dec. 11, 2025) [hereinafter E.O. 14366]. |
| 7. |
S.B. 2337, 89th Leg., Reg. Sess. (Tex. 2025). |
| 8. |
Paul S. Atkins, Keynote Address at the John L. Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance's 25th Anniversary Gala (Oct. 9, 2025) [hereinafter Atkins Speech], https://www.sec.gov/newsroom/speeches-statements/atkins-10092025-keynote-address-john-l-weinberg-center-corporate-governances-25th-anniversary-gala https://perma.cc/X6LX-Y9BL. |
| 9. |
Shareholder Proposal Modernization, Off. of Info. & Regul. Affs., Off. of Mgmt. & Budget (2025) [hereinafter SEC Regulatory Flexibility Agenda], https://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/eAgendaViewRule?pubId=202504&RIN=3235-AN47 https://perma.cc/78DE-NMY6. |
| 10. |
See generally Adolf Berle & Gardiner Means, The Modern Corporation and Private Property (1932) (the seminal work on the separation of ownership and control of large public companies). |
| 11. |
E.g., Malone v. Brincat, 722 A.2d 5, 9 (Del. 1998). As a matter of corporate law theory, the proposition that shareholders "own" corporations is controversial. Julian Velasco, Shareholder Ownership and Primacy, 2010 U. Ill. L. Rev. 897, 899 (2010). |
| 12. |
Orman v. Cullman, 794 A.2d 5, 19 (Del. Ch. 2002) ("A cardinal precept of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware is that directors, rather than shareholders, manage the business and affairs of the corporation.") (quotation marks and citation omitted). |
| 13. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 141(a) (2025); Model Bus. Corp. Act § 8.01(b) (2025). |
| 14. |
See Grimes v. Donald, No. CIV. A. 13358, 1995 WL 54441, at *8 (Del. Ch. Jan. 11, 1995), aff'd, 673 A.2d 1207 (Del. 1996). |
| 15. |
Stephen M. Bainbridge, Director Primacy: The Means and Ends of Corporate Governance, 97 Nw. U. L. Rev. 547 (2003). |
| 16. |
Michael C. Jensen & William H. Meckling, Theory of the Firm: Managerial Behavior, Agency Costs and Ownership Structure, 3 J. Fin. Econ. 305 (1976). |
| 17. |
Claire Hill & Brett McDonnell, Sanitizing Interested Transactions, 36 Del. J. Corp. L. 903 (2011). |
| 18. |
Edward B. Rock, Adapting to the New Shareholder-Centric Reality, 161 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1907, 1915 (2013). |
| 19. |
Id. at 1914. |
| 20. |
Lucian Bebchuk & Jesse Fried, Pay without Performance: The Unfulfilled Promise of Executive Compensation (2006). |
| 21. |
Frank H. Easterbrook & Daniel R. Fischel, The Proper Role of a Target's Management in Responding to a Tender Offer, 94 Harv. L. Rev. 1161 (1981). |
| 22. |
John C. Coffee, Jr., Shareholders versus Managers: The Strain in the Corporate Web, 85 Mich. L. Rev. 1, 19 (1986). |
| 23. |
Jensen & Meckling, supra note 16, at 312–13. |
| 24. |
Rock, supra note 18, at 1911 (describing the separation of ownership and control as the "master problem" of U.S. corporate law). |
| 25. |
Frank H. Easterbrook & Daniel R. Fischel, Voting in Corporate Law, 26 J. L. & Econ. 395 (1983). As discussed below, shareholder voting—particularly in the context of shareholder proposals—may also serve other functions. See infra "Justifications for and Criticisms of the Shareholder Proposal Rule." |
| 26. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 211(b); Model Bus. Corp. Act § 8.03(c). |
| 27. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 242(b); Model Bus. Corp. Act § 10.03(b). |
| 28. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 251(c); Model Bus. Corp. Act § 11.04(b). |
| 29. |
15 U.S.C. § 78n-1; NYSE Listed Company Manual § 303A.08 (2025); Nasdaq Stock Mkt. LLC Rules § 5635(c) (2025). |
| 30. |
See Shareholder Proposals, 72 Fed. Reg. 43466, 43467 (Aug. 3, 2007) (codified at 17 C.F.R. pt. 240). |
| 31. |
Leonard H. Axe, Corporate Proxies, 41 Mich. L. Rev. 38, 38–40 (1942). |
| 32. |
Sarah C. Haan, Voting Rights in Corporate Governance: History and Political Economy, 96 S. Cal. L. Rev. 881, 887–89 (2023). |
| 33. |
Jill E. Fisch, From Legitimacy to Logic: Reconstructing Proxy Regulation, 46 Vand. L. Rev. 1129, 1134 (1993). |
| 34. |
Haan, supra note 32, at 902–04. |
| 35. |
Fisch, supra note 33, at 1135. The New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq also require listed companies to solicit proxies for all shareholder meetings. NYSE Listed Company Manual § 402.04(A); Nasdaq Stock Mkt. LLC Rules § 5620(b). |
| 36. |
Fisch, supra note 33, at 1135. |
| 37. |
Id. at 1135 n.25. |
| 38. |
Sheldon E. Bernstein & Henry G. Fischer, The Regulation of the Solicitation of Proxies: Some Reflections on Corporate Democracy, 7 U. Chi. L. Rev. 226, 227 (1940) ("It is generally recognized that in the larger corporations the stockholders' meeting is now only a necessary formality; that stockholder expression can only be had by the statutory device of proxy. As a result, within limitations, realistically the solicitation of proxies is today the stockholders' meeting."). |
| 39. |
Haan, supra note 32, at 888. |
| 40. |
Joel Seligman, The Transformation of Wall Street: A History of the Securities and Exchange Commission and Modern Corporate Finance 1–240 (3d ed. 2003). |
| 41. |
Frank D. Emerson & Franklin C. Latcham, SEC Proxy Regulation: Steps Toward More Effective Stockholder Participation, 59 Yale L.J. 635, 635 (1950). |
| 42. |
Id. |
| 43. |
Id. at 635–36. |
| 44. |
Bernstein & Fischer, supra note 38, at 227. |
| 45. |
15 U.S.C. § 78n(a)(1). A Senate committee report on the Exchange Act stated: "Too often proxies are solicited without explanation to the stockholder of the real nature of the question for which authority to cast his vote is sought. It is contemplated that the rules and regulations promulgated by the Commission [under Section 14] will protect investors from promiscuous solicitation of their proxies, on the one hand, by irresponsible outsiders seeking to wrest control of a corporation away from honest and conscientious corporate officers; and, on the other hand, by unscrupulous corporate officers seeking to retain control of the management by concealing and distorting facts." S. Rep. No. 1455, 73d Cong. 2d Sess. 77 (1934). |
| 46. |
4 Louis Loss et al., Securities Regulation 425–34 (4th ed. 2009) (cataloguing the evolution of the proxy rules). |
| 47. |
15 U.S.C. §§ 78l(b), 78l(g), 78n(a)(1). |
| 48. |
Bus. Roundtable v. SEC, 905 F.2d 406, 410–12 (D.C. Cir. 1990) (explaining that proxy regulation "bears almost exclusively on disclosure" while declining to say that disclosure is "necessarily the sole subject" of Section 14 of the Exchange Act). |
| 49. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-4(f). |
| 50. |
Id. § 240.14a-4. |
| 51. |
Id. § 240.14a-9. |
| 52. |
Id. § 240.14a-8. |
| 53. |
Fisch, supra note 33, at 1142. |
| 54. |
See Shareholder Proposals, 72 Fed. Reg. 43466, 43467 (Aug. 3, 2007). |
| 55. |
Fisch, supra note 33, at 1143. |
| 56. |
Id. at 1143–44. |
| 57. |
Bernstein & Fischer, supra note 38, at 233–34. |
| 58. |
Amendment of Regulation X-14, 5 Fed. Reg. 174, 175 (Jan. 12, 1940) (codified at 17 C.F.R. pt. 240). |
| 59. |
Solicitation of Proxies Under the Act, 7 Fed. Reg. 10655, 10656 (Dec. 22, 1942) (codified at 17 C.F.R. pt. 240). |
| 60. |
Proposals as Proper Subject for Action, Exchange Act Release No. 34-3638, 1945 WL 27415 at *2 (Jan. 3, 1945) [hereinafter 1945 Guidance]. |
| 61. |
Adoption of Amendments Relating to Proposals by Security Holders, Exchange Act Release No. 34-12999, 1976 WL 160347 at *7 (Nov. 22, 1976) [hereinafter 1976 Amendments]. |
| 62. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(i)(1) note. |
| 63. |
SEC Chair Highlights Paths for Companies to Exclude Shareholder Proposals, Sullivan & Cromwell LLP (Oct. 14, 2025) [hereinafter S&C Memo], https://www.sullcrom.com/insights/memo/2025/October/SEC-Chair-Highlights-Paths-Companies-Exclude-Shareholder-Proposals https://perma.cc/7EPR-9JE6. |
| 64. |
General Rules and Regulations, 12 Fed. Reg. 8768, 8770 (Dec. 24, 1947) (codified at 17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8). The 1947 amendments to the shareholder proposal rule also clarified that the rule does not apply to director elections. Id. |
| 65. |
Courtney C. Haseley & Elizabeth A. Ising, The Shareholder Proposal Process, in Practical Guide to SEC Proxy and Compensation Rules § 12.02 (Amy L. Goodman et al. eds., 2022). |
| 66. |
See infra "The SEC No-Action Process." |
| 67. |
Dennis R. Honabach & Mark A. Sargent, Proxy Rules Handbook § 5:36 (2025). |
| 68. |
SEC v. Transamerica Corp., 163 F.2d 511 (3d Cir. 1947). |
| 69. |
Id. at 518. |
| 70. |
Id. |
| 71. |
See infra "Private Ordering." |
| 72. |
Adoption of Amendments to Proxy Rules, Exchange Act Release No. 34-4185, 1948 WL 28695, at *3 (Nov. 5, 1948). |
| 73. |
Amendment of Proxy Rules, Exchange Act Release No. 34-4775, Amendment of Proxy Rules, 1952 WL 5254 at *8 (Dec. 11, 1952) [hereinafter 1952 Amendments]. |
| 74. |
Adoption of Amendments to Proxy Rules, Exchange Act Release No. 34-4979, 1954 WL 5772, at *4 (Jan. 6, 1954) [hereinafter 1954 Amendments]. The 1954 amendments also codified the principle that state law determines whether a proposal represents a "proper subject" for shareholder action and made the exclusion for resubmitted proposals more restrictive. Id. |
| 75. |
Adoption of Amendments to Proxy Rules and Information Rules, Exchange Act Release No. 34-8206, 1967 WL 88215, at *9 (Dec. 14, 1967). |
| 76. |
Sean J. Griffith, Corporate Speech and Corporate Purpose: A Theory of Corporate First Amendment Rights, 5 J. Free Speech L. 441, 455 & n.52 (2024). |
| 77. |
Harwell Wells, A Long View of Shareholder Power: From the Antebellum Corporation to the Twenty-First Century, 67 Fla. L. Rev. 1033, 1083–84 (2015). |
| 78. |
Griffith, supra note 76, at 457. |
| 79. |
1945 Guidance, supra note 60, at *1. |
| 80. |
Id. |
| 81. |
Id. at *2. |
| 82. |
Peck v. Greyhound Corp., 97 F. Supp. 679 (S.D.N.Y. 1951). |
| 83. |
Id. at 680. |
| 84. |
Donald E. Schwartz, The Public-Interest Proxy Contest: Reflections on Campaign GM, 69 Mich. L. Rev. 419, 442 (1971). |
| 85. |
Peck, 97 F. Supp. at 680. A federal district court rejected a lawsuit seeking to enjoin Greyhound from soliciting proxies without including the proposal in its proxy materials. Id. at 681. |
| 86. |
1952 Amendments, supra note 73, at *8. |
| 87. |
432 F.2d 659 (D.C. Cir. 1970), vacated as moot by 404 U.S. 403 (1972). |
| 88. |
Id. at 663. |
| 89. |
Id. |
| 90. |
Id. |
| 91. |
Id. |
| 92. |
Id. at 682. |
| 93. |
Id. at 679. |
| 94. |
Id. at 679–81. |
| 95. |
Id. at 681. |
| 96. |
Schwartz, supra note 84, at 425. |
| 97. |
Id. at 534–37. |
| 98. |
Id. at 424–25. |
| 99. |
Id. at 430. |
| 100. |
Wells, supra note 77, at 1084. |
| 101. |
Solicitations of Proxies, Exchange Act Release No. 34-9784, 1972 WL 125400, at *4 (Sept. 22, 1972) [hereinafter 1972 Amendments]. |
| 102. |
Id. (emphasis added). |
| 103. |
Id. |
| 104. |
1976 Amendments, supra note 61, at *11. In 1976, the SEC also adopted new exclusions for proposals that would, if implemented, cause a company to violate state, federal, or foreign law; proposals that violate the proxy rules; proposals that have been rendered moot; and proposals relating to specific amounts of dividends. Id. at *18. |
| 105. |
Id. at *11. As discussed below, the SEC would later conclude that the ordinary business exclusion allows companies to exclude proposals that seek to engage in "micromanagement" even if such proposals involve significant policy issues. See infra "Ordinary Business." |
| 106. |
Griffith, supra note 76, at 459. |
| 107. |
Id. |
| 108. |
Susan W. Liebeler, A Proposal to Rescind the Shareholder Proposal Rule, 18 Ga. L. Rev. 425, 431 (1984). Despite this surge, governance proposals continued to predominate. Stuart L. Gillan & Laura T. Starks, The Evolution of Shareholder Activism in the United States, in Institutional Investor Activism: Hedge Funds and Private Equity, Economics and Regulation 39, 41 (William W. Bratton & Joseph A. McCahery eds., 2015). |
| 109. |
See infra "1982 Proposed Amendments and 1983 Final Amendments" & "From Cracker Barrel to the 1998 Amendments." |
| 110. |
See infra "From Cracker Barrel to the 1998 Amendments." |
| 111. |
Id. |
| 112. |
Stuart L. Gillan & Laura T. Starks, Corporate Governance Proposals and Shareholder Activism: The Role of Institutional Investors, 57 J. Fin. Econ. 275 (2000). |
| 113. |
Proposed Amendments to Rule 14a-8, Exchange Act Release No. 34-19135, 1982 WL 600869, at *3 (Oct. 14, 1982) [hereinafter 1982 Proposed Amendments]. |
| 114. |
Id. |
| 115. |
Id. at *4–5. Among other things, the second alternative would have prohibited companies from adopting eligibility criteria that would disqualify shareholders owning at least 1% of voting securities or voting securities with at least $5,000 in market value. Id. at *25. Companies would have been allowed to adopt "reasonable definitions and criteria" of their own in administering Rule 14a-8's exclusions. Id. |
| 116. |
Id. at *5. |
| 117. |
Id. at *6. |
| 118. |
Id. |
| 119. |
Id. |
| 120. |
Amendments to Rule 14a-8, Exchange Act Release No. 34-20091, 1983 WL 33272, at *2 (Aug. 16, 1983) [hereinafter 1983 Amendments]. |
| 121. |
Id. |
| 122. |
Id. |
| 123. |
Id. |
| 124. |
Id. |
| 125. |
Id. |
| 126. |
Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, Inc. SEC No-Action Letter, 1992 WL 289095 (Oct. 13, 1992) [hereinafter 1992 Cracker Barrel No-Action Letter]. |
| 127. |
Honabach & Sargent, supra note 67 § 5:12. In contrast, proposals involving employee benefits, hiring and firing, and compensation for workers other than senior executives were typically deemed excludable as ordinary business matters. 1992 Cracker Barrel No-Action Letter, supra note 126, at *1. |
| 128. |
1992 Cracker Barrel No-Action Letter, supra note 126, at *1. |
| 129. |
Id. |
| 130. |
Id. |
| 131. |
Id. |
| 132. |
Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, Inc., SEC No-Action Letter, 1993 WL 11016 (Jan. 15, 1993). |
| 133. |
Amalgamated Clothing & Textile Workers Union v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 821 F. Supp. 877, 890 (S.D.N.Y. 1993). |
| 134. |
Id. at 891–92. |
| 135. |
New York City Emps. Ret. Sys. v. SEC, 843 F. Supp. 858, 881 (S.D.N.Y. 1994), reversed by, 45 F.3d 7 (2d Cir. 1995). |
| 136. |
Id. at 882. |
| 137. |
New York City Emps. Ret. Sys. v. SEC, 45 F.3d 7, 12–14 (2d Cir. 1995). |
| 138. |
Phillip R. Stanton, SEC Reverses Cracker Barrel No-Action Letter, 77 Wash. U. L. Q. 979, 989 (1999). |
| 139. |
P.L. 104-290, § 510(b), 110 Stat. 3416, 3450 (1996). |
| 140. |
Amendments to Rules on Shareholder Proposals, Exchange Act Release No. 34-39093, 1997 WL 578696, at *13 (Sept. 18, 1997) [hereinafter 1997 Proposed Amendments]. |
| 141. |
Id. at *5. |
| 142. |
Amendments to Rules on Shareholder Proposals, Exchange Act Release No. 34-40018, 1998 WL 254809, at *3 (May 21, 1998) [hereinafter 1998 Amendments]. |
| 143. |
For example, the SEC declined to adopt a purely economic standard for administering the relevance exclusion, an "override" mechanism empowering groups of shareholders with at least 3% voting power to overturn certain exclusions, and stricter requirements for resubmitted proposals. Id. at *12. |
| 144. |
Liebeler, supra note 108, at 439; Gillan & Starks, supra note 108, at 41. |
| 145. |
Gillan & Starks, supra note 108, at 43. |
| 146. |
Id. |
| 147. |
Roberta Romano, Public Pension Fund Activism in Corporate Governance Reconsidered, 93 Colum. L. Rev. 795, 799–800 & n.16 (1993). |
| 148. |
Pension fund activism in the 1980s was concentrated in a small group of particularly engaged funds: the California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS), the California State Teachers' Retirement System (CalSTRS), the New York City Employees' Retirement System, the State of Wisconsin Investment Board (SWIB), and the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America-College Retirement Equities Fund (TIAA-CREF). Diane Del Guercio & Jennifer Hawkins, The Motivation and Impact of Pension Fund Activism, 52 J. Fin. Econ. 293, 297 (1999). The emergence of these funds as shareholder activists coincided with the creation of the Council of Institutional Investors (CII)—a lobbying group for shareholder rights—in 1985. Gillan & Starks, supra note 107, at 42. CII's founding co-chairs were the California State Treasurer, the New York City Comptroller, and the chair of the SWIB. About CII, Council of Institutional Investors https://www.cii.org/about https://perma.cc/7U78-SKJ2 (last visited Dec. 11, 2025). |
| 149. |
Roberta Romano, Less is More: Making Institutional Investor Activism a Valuable Mechanism of Corporate Governance, 18 Yale J. Regul. 175, 175 (2001). |
| 150. |
Gillan & Starks, supra note 108, at 43. |
| 151. |
Stewart J. Schwab & Randall S. Thomas, Realigning Corporate Governance: Shareholder Activism by Labor Unions, 96 Mich. L. Rev. 1018, 1045 (1998). |
| 152. |
Randall S. Thomas & Kenneth J. Martin, Should Labor Be Allowed to Make Shareholder Proposals?, 73 Wash. L. Rev. 41, 42–43 (1998). |
| 153. |
Schwab & Thomas, supra note 151, at 1045, 1091–92. |
| 154. |
Bevis Longstreth, Comm'r, SEC, The SEC and Shareholder Proposals: Simplification in Regulation, Remarks to the National Association of Manufacturers (Dec. 11, 1981), https://www.sec.gov/news/speech/1981/121181longstreth.pdf https://perma.cc/PD3W-UHVH. |
| 155. |
Id. |
| 156. |
Romano, supra note 149, at 186; Jonathan M. Karpoff et al., Corporate Governance and Shareholder Initiatives: Empirical Evidence, 42 J. Fin. Econ. 365, 368 (1996). |
| 157. |
Kosmas Papadopoulos, The Long View: The Role of Shareholder Proposals in Shaping U.S. Corporate Governance (2000-2018), Harv. L. Sch. F. on Corp. Gov. (Feb. 6, 2019), https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2019/02/06/the-long-view-the-role-of-shareholder-proposals-in-shaping-u-s-corporate-governance-2000-2018 https://perma.cc/F6TM-6ZFU. |
| 158. |
Andrew R. Brownstein & Igor Kirman, Can a Board Say No When Shareholders Say Yes? Responding to Majority Vote Resolutions, 60 Bus. Law. 23, 27 (2004). |
| 159. |
Id. at 28. |
| 160. |
Jeffrey N. Gordon, The Rise of Independent Directors in the United States, 1950-2005: Of Shareholder Value and Stock Market Prices, 59 Stan. L. Rev. 1465, 1568 (2007). |
| 161. |
Id. |
| 162. |
Regulation of Communications Among Shareholders, Exchange Act Release No. 34-31326, 1992 WL 301258, at *7–11 (Oct. 16, 1992). |
| 163. |
Id. |
| 164. |
E.g., Iman Anabtawi & Lynn Stout, Fiduciary Duties for Activist Shareholders, 60 Stan. L. Rev. 1255, 1276–77 (2008). |
| 165. |
Papadopoulos, supra note 157. |
| 166. |
Id. |
| 167. |
Yonca Ertimur et al., Board of Directors' Responsiveness to Shareholders: Evidence from Shareholder Proposals, 16 J. Corp. Fin. 53 (2010). |
| 168. |
A mutual fund is a collective investment vehicle that pools money from public investors to purchase a portfolio of stocks, bonds, and/or other financial assets. William A. Birdthistle, Empire of the Fund: The Way We Save Now 19 (2016). Mutual funds are created by investment advisers, which enter contracts to provide the funds with management services in exchange for a fee based on a fund's assets under management. Id. at 32–38. Mutual fund investors receive the economic benefits of a fund's performance net of fees. Under their advisory contracts, however, mutual fund advisers typically have the right to vote shares held by the funds. Sean J. Griffith, Opt-In Stewardship: Toward an Optimal Delegation of Mutual Fund Voting Authority, 98 Tex. L. Rev. 983, 992 (2020). In recent decades, a close cousin to mutual funds—the exchange-traded fund (ETF)—has grown in popularity. CRS Report CRS Report R45318, Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs): Issues for Congress, by Eva Su. As with mutual funds, an ETF's investment adviser typically has a contractual right to vote the shares in the fund's portfolio. Danielle Gurrieri, Pass-Through Voting, Broadridge (2025), https://www.broadridge.com/article/wealth-management/pass-through-voting https://perma.cc/3CZG-Q94G (last visited Jan. 6, 2026). For ease of discussion, this report will use the term "mutual fund" to refer to both mutual funds and ETFs. |
| 169. |
Brownstein & Kirman, supra note 158, at 30. |
| 170. |
Sean J. Griffith & Dorothy S. Lund, Conflicted Mutual Fund Voting in Corporate Law, 99 B.U. L. Rev. 1151, 1176–81 (2019). |
| 171. |
Id. at 1179. |
| 172. |
Disclosure of Proxy Voting Policies and Proxy Voting Records by Registered Management Investment Companies, 68 Fed. Reg. 6564 (Feb. 7, 2003) (codified at 17 C.F.R. pts. 239, 249, 270, 274). |
| 173. |
E.g., Gretchen Morgenson, A Door Opens. The View is Ugly, N.Y. Times (Sept. 12, 2004), https://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/12/business/yourmoney/a-door-opens-the-view-is-ugly.html. |
| 174. |
Proxy Voting by Investment Advisers, 68 Fed. Reg. 6585, 6588 (Feb. 7, 2003) (codified at 17 C.F.R. pt. 275). |
| 175. |
Id. |
| 176. |
Id. at 6588 n.24. |
| 177. |
Andrew F. Tuch, Proxy Advisor Influence in a Comparative Light, 99 B.U. L. Rev. 1459, 1468–69 (2019); Brownstein & Kirman, supra note 158, at 35–38. |
| 178. |
Douglas Sarro, Proxy Advisors as Issue Spotters, 15 Brook. J. Corp. Fin. & Com. L. 371, 378 (2021). |
| 179. |
Proxy Voting by Investment Advisers, 68 Fed. Reg. at 6588. |
| 180. |
Letter from Douglas Scheidt, Assoc. Dir. & Chief Counsel, Div. of Inv. Mgmt., SEC, to Mari Anne Pisarri, Pickard & Djinis LLP (Sept. 15, 2004); Letter from Douglas Scheidt, Assoc. Dir. & Chief Counsel, Div. of Inv. Mgmt., SEC, to Kent S. Hughes, Managing Dir., Egan-Jones Proxy Servs. (May 27, 2004). The SEC's Division of Investment Management withdrew the 2004 no-action letters in 2018. Statement Regarding Staff Proxy Advisory Letters, Div. of Inv. Mgmt., SEC (Sept. 2018), https://www.sec.gov/divisions/investment/imannouncements/im-info-2018-02.pdf https://perma.cc/3STT-2N3W. |
| 181. |
E.g., Tuch, supra note 177, at 1468–69. |
| 182. |
Brownstein & Kirman, supra note 158, at 35–38. |
| 183. |
Id. at 37–38. |
| 184. |
Id. |
| 185. |
Lucian Bebchuk & Scott Hirst, Index Funds and the Future of Corporate Governance: Theory, Evidence, and Policy, 119 Colum. L. Rev. 2029, 2101–05 (2019). |
| 186. |
Griffith, supra note 168, at 984. |
| 187. |
Brownstein & Kirman, supra note 158, at 45–49. |
| 188. |
Id. at 50 & n.153. |
| 189. |
Glass Lewis, 2025 Benchmark Policy Guidelines at 16 (2025) [hereinafter Glass Lewis 2025 Benchmark Guidelines]. |
| 190. |
Brian R. Cheffins, The Public Company Transformed 281–88 (2018). |
| 191. |
Id. at 289–95. |
| 192. |
Ertimur et al., supra note 167; Brownstein & Kirman, supra note 158, at 66–67. |
| 193. |
John H. Matheson & Vilena Nicolet, Shareholder Democracy and Special Interest Governance, 103 Minn. L. Rev. 1649, 1661 (2019). |
| 194. |
Lynn S. Paine & Will Hurwitz, Brief Note on Staggered Boards, Harv. Bus. Sch. Background Note 323-040 (May 2024). |
| 195. |
Stephen J. Choi et al., Does Majority Voting Improve Board Accountability?, 83 U. Chi. L. Rev. 1119, 1125 (2016). |
| 196. |
Id. at 1120–21. |
| 197. |
Id. |
| 198. |
Id. at 1125; Lucian A. Bebchuk, The Myth of the Shareholder Franchise, 93 Va. L. Rev. 675, 682–86, 701–04 (2007) (documenting the rarity of proxy contests and advocating a default majority voting standard to complement other suggested governance reforms). |
| 199. |
Matheson & Nicolet, supra note 193, at 1663. There are three general alternatives to the traditional plurality standard: (1) "plurality plus," (2) majority voting with board-rejectable resignation, and (3) "consequential majority voting." Id. A plurality plus regime retains the plurality standard, but requires directors to tender conditional resignations that are triggered by a failure to receive a majority of votes cast at the next election. Choi et al., supra note 195, at 1125–26. These regimes typically give boards discretion to reject a director's resignation. William K. Sjostrom, Jr. & Young Sang Kim, Majority Voting for the Election of Directors, 40 Conn. L. Rev. 459, 480–81 (2007). Under a "true majority" standard, director candidates are not elected unless they receive majority support. Mary Siegel, The Holes in Majority Voting, 2011 Colum. Bus. L. Rev. 364, 368 (2011). Because most states have a "holdover" rule allowing incumbent directors to remain in office until the occurrence of specified events—such as their resignation or the election of a replacement director—true majority regimes usually include a requirement that incumbent directors tender their resignations upon failing to secure reelection. Sjostrom & Kim, supra note 199, at 482–83. Almost all true majority regimes give boards discretion to reject director resignations in these circumstances. Council of Inst. Investors FAQ: Majority Voting for Directors (2017) [hereinafter CII Majority Voting FAQ]. A handful of companies, however, have adopted "consequential majority voting," which requires directors who fail to secure majority support to leave the board within a specified timeframe. Id. |
| 200. |
Choi et al., supra note 195, at 1121. Although shareholder activists succeeded in securing widespread adoption of majority voting, some commentators have doubted the significance of this change. E.g., Marcel Kahan & Edward Rock, Symbolic Corporate Governance Politics, 94 B.U. L. Rev. 1997, 2012–14 (2014); Siegel, supra note 199; Sjostrom & Kim, supra note 199, at 487. |
| 201. |
Choi et al., supra note 195, at 1121. |
| 202. |
CII Majority Voting FAQ, supra note 199. |
| 203. |
Matheson & Nicolet, supra note 193, at 1665. |
| 204. |
12 U.S.C. § 5221(e). |
| 205. |
15 U.S.C. § 78n-1(a)(1)–(2). |
| 206. |
Id. |
| 207. |
Pamela Marcogliese et al., When Do We Say What on Pay?, Freshfields (Mar. 20, 2023), https://blog.freshfields.us/post/102iauh/when-do-we-say-what-on-pay https://perma.cc/CGW2-VBSF. |
| 208. |
ISS, United States Proxy Voting Guidelines: Benchmark Policy Recommendations 50 (2025); Glass Lewis 2025 Benchmark Guidelines, supra note 188, at 62; BlackRock, BlackRock Investment Stewardship: Proxy Voting Guidelines for Benchmark Policies – U.S. Securities 15 (2025). |
| 209. |
Holly J. Gregory et al., Proxy Access: A Five-Year Review, Harv. L. Sch. F. on Corp. Gov. (Feb. 4, 2020), https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2020/02/04/proxy-access-a-five-year-review https://perma.cc/FJ23-3VUE. |
| 210. |
Proxy Access, Council of Inst. Investors (accessed Dec. 16, 2025), https://www.cii.org/proxy_access https://perma.cc/8BAH-XEAR (last visited Dec. 16, 2025). |
| 211. |
See infra "Director Elections." |
| 212. |
Subodh Mishra, U.S. Shareholder Proposals: A Decade in Motion, Harv. L. Sch. F. on Corp. Gov. (Nov. 18, 2024), https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2024/11/18/u-s-shareholder-proposals-a-decade-in-motion https://perma.cc/D3JM-NDRM. |
| 213. |
Gregory et al., supra note 209. |
| 214. |
Kobi Kastiel & Yaron Nili, The Corporate Governance Gap, 131 Yale L.J. 782, 840 (2022). |
| 215. |
Id. at 827, 829, 833. |
| 216. |
Don't Forget the "G" in ESG (Because Your Shareholders Won't), Conf. Bd. (Feb. 14, 2022), https://www.conference-board.org/topics/shareholder-voting/corporate-governance-proposals-brief-5 https://perma.cc/BWY3-HXSC. |
| 217. |
Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, 2025 Proxy Season Review: Part 1, at 15 (2025), https://www.sullcrom.com/SullivanCromwell/_Assets/PDFs/Memos/2025-Proxy-Season-Review-Part-1.pdf |
| 218. |
Kosmas Papadopoulos, The Long View: US Proxy Voting Trends on E&S Issues from 2000 to 2018, Harv. L. Sch. F. on Corp. Gov. (Jan. 31, 2019), https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2019/01/31/the-long-view-us-proxy-voting-trends-on-es-issues-from-2000-to-2018/ https://perma.cc/A98V-6DVH. |
| 219. |
Mishra, supra note 212. |
| 220. |
Sarah C. Haan, Shareholder Proposal Settlements and the Private Ordering of Public Elections, 126 Yale L.J. 262, 264–65 (2016). |
| 221. |
Mishra, supra note 212. |
| 222. |
Id. |
| 223. |
Id. |
| 224. |
Kenneth Khoo & Roberto Tallarita, Expanding Shareholder Voice: The Impact of SEC Guidance on Environmental and Social Proposals, J. L. & Econ (forthcoming). |
| 225. |
See infra "Relevance" and "Ordinary Business." |
| 226. |
Some commentators have argued that the SEC's greater receptiveness toward prescriptive E&S proposals during the Biden Administration—reflected in 2021 guidance—was responsible for the decline in support for E&S proposals in 2022 and 2023. Their theory is that the 2021 guidance encouraged shareholders to submit more prescriptive proposals—for example, proposals requesting that a company adopt specific targets for carbon emissions, as opposed to those requesting that a company publish a report regarding its emission-reduction efforts. Prescriptive proposals have tended to enjoy less shareholder support than non-prescriptive proposals. Khoo & Tallarita, supra note 224; Cydney Posner, More prescriptive proposals, less support for 2022 proxy season, Cooley LLP (Aug. 4, 2022), https://cooleypubco.com/2022/08/04/prescriptive-proposals-2022/ https://perma.cc/Q8RV-WWYN. |
| 227. |
Mishra, supra note 212. |
| 228. |
Ann M. Lipton, Will the Real Shareholder Primacy Please Stand Up?, 137 Harv. L. Rev. 1584, 1594 (2024) (reviewing Stephen M. Bainbridge, The Profit Motive: Defending Shareholder Value Maximization (2023)) (indicating that the phrase "ESG investing" has become "somewhat infamous for its malleability"); Elizabeth Pollman, The Making and Meaning of ESG, 14 Harv. Bus. L. Rev. 403, 436–37 (2024) (noting that the term "ESG" lacks a clear definition and has been used for a range of different purposes); Max M. Schanzenbach & Robert H. Sitkoff, Reconciling Fiduciary Duty and Social Conscience: The Law and Economics of ESG Investing by a Trustee, 72 Stan. L. Rev. 381, 397 (2020) (explaining that the term "ESG investing" is "inherently ambiguous" and distinguishing between different variants of that concept). |
| 229. | |
| 230. |
Id.; see also Aneil Kovvali & Yair Listokin, Valuing ESG, 49 BYU L. Rev. 705, 719 (2024) (distinguishing between "an instrumental approach to ESG" that seeks long-term profits and "a more pluralistic approach to ESG" that is "prepared to sacrifice profits simply to advance an environmental or social cause"); Schanzenbach & Sitkoff, supra note 228, at 388, 397 (noting that one version of ESG investing is "motivated by providing a benefit to a third party or otherwise for moral or ethical reasons"). |
| 231. |
Frederick H. Alexander, Benefit Corporation Law and Governance: Pursuing Profit with Purpose 45 (2018) (distinguishing between concessionary and non-concessionary investing). |
| 232. |
Lipton, supra note 228, at 1594. |
| 233. |
Douglas M. Grim & Daniel B. Berkowitz, Vanguard, ESG, SRI, and impact investing: A primer for decision-making, at 17 (2020), https://www.ch.vanguard/content/dam/intl/europe/documents/en/esg-a-primer-for-decision-making-eu-en-pro.pdf https://perma.cc/2XP5-RFHL (describing an "ESG integration" strategy that involves the incorporation of "material climate-change risks" into assessments of asset valuations with an objective of improving risk-adjusted returns). |
| 234. |
Almost all of this controversy focuses on the "E" and "S" in "ESG." Notwithstanding the rise of "ESG" as a concept, it remains standard to distinguish between governance proposals and E&S proposals—a convention that this report follows. E.g., Haan, supra note 220, at 300. |
| 235. |
Staff of ESG Working Grp., H. Comm. on Fin. Servs., 118th Cong., The Failure of ESG: An Examination of Environmental, Social, and Governance Factors in the American Boardroom and Needed Reforms at 9–10 (2024). |
| 236. |
Caleb Griffin, Margins: Estimating the Influence of the Big Three on Shareholder Proposals, 73 SMU L. Rev. 409, 411 (2020) (finding that the "Big Three" index fund managers—BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street—individually have the potential to determine a significant proportion of proxy votes and together possess the power to decide the outcome of most shareholder proposal votes). |
| 237. |
See infra "Corporate Social Responsibility." |
| 238. |
Liz Walsh et al., Anti-ESG Shareholder Proposals in 2025, Harv. L. Sch. F. on Corp. Gov. (June 18, 2025), https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2025/06/18/anti-esg-shareholder-in-2025/ https://perma.cc/GG27-X85N. |
| 239. |
Id. |
| 240. |
Id. |
| 241. |
Atkins Speech, supra note 8. |
| 242. |
Id. |
| 243. |
Sanford Lewis & Khadija Foda, The SEC, Delaware and the High Stakes for Investors on Advisory Shareholder Proposals, Harv. L. Sch. F. on Corp. Gov. (Nov. 20, 2025), https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2025/11/20/the-sec-delaware-and-the-high-stakes-for-investors-on-advisory-shareholder-proposals/ https://perma.cc/LW7K-HTJU. |
| 244. |
Div. of Corp. Fin., SEC, Statement Regarding the Division of Corporation Finance's Role in the Exchange Act Rule 14a-8 Process for the Current Proxy Season (Nov. 17, 2025), https://www.sec.gov/newsroom/speeches-statements/statement-regarding-division-corporation-finances-role-exchange-act-rule-14a-8-process-current-proxy-season https://perma.cc/XH28-Y2JS. |
| 245. |
Id. |
| 246. |
Id. |
| 247. |
Mark T. Uyeda, Comm'r, SEC, Remarks at the Society for Corporate Governance 2023 National Conference (June 21, 2023) [hereinafter Uyeda Speech], https://www.sec.gov/newsroom/speeches-statements/uyeda-remarks-society-corporate-governance-conference-062123 https://perma.cc/L76G-VCLW. |
| 248. |
Atkins Speech, supra note 8. The extent to which companies can adopt their own procedural and substantive standards for shareholder proposals is discussed in "Private Ordering" infra. |
| 249. |
Id. |
| 250. |
SEC Regulatory Flexibility Agenda, supra note 9. |
| 251. |
1998 Amendments, supra note 142, at *2 (discussing resistance to changes that would have diminished SEC staff's role as "informal arbiters" of the excludability of shareholder proposals). |
| 252. |
Elizabeth A. Ising, Ronald O. Mueller & Geoffrey Walter, 2025 Shareholder Proposal Season: A First Glimpse at Key No-Action Request Results, Harv. L. Sch. F. on Corp. Gov. (June 14, 2025), https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2025/06/14/2025-shareholder-proposal-season-a-first-glimpse-at-key-no-action-request-results/ https://perma.cc/P4CR-S5NV. |
| 253. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(j)(1). |
| 254. |
Haseley & Ising, supra note 65 § 12.03[A]. |
| 255. |
SEC Staff Legal Bulletin No. 14 (July 13, 2001) [hereinafter SLB 14], https://www.sec.gov/interps/legal/cfslb14.htm https://perma.cc/YPG6-NTL9. |
| 256. |
Id. |
| 257. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(k). |
| 258. |
Id. § 240.14a-8(g). |
| 259. |
SLB 14, supra note 255. SEC staff may express no view on a company's intention to omit a proposal in cases where the arguments raised in a no-action request are the subject of litigation. Id. |
| 260. |
Aranow & Einhorn on Proxy Contests for Corporate Control § 16.02 (3d ed. 2001) [hereinafter Aranow & Einhorn]. |
| 261. |
Proxy Power and Proposal Abuse, Hearing Before the H. Comm. on Fin. Servs., 119th Cong. 8 (Sept. 10, 2025) (statement of Ronald Mueller, Partner, Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP) [hereinafter Mueller Testimony]. |
| 262. |
Keir D. Gumbs & Lillian Brown, Bloomberg BNA, Shareholder Proposals, at A-25–26 (2018). |
| 263. |
Id. at A-26. |
| 264. |
Courtney Bartkus, Appealing No-Action Responses under Rule 14a-8: Informal Procedures of the SEC and the Availability of Meaningful Review, 93 Denv. L. Rev. F. 199, 203 (2016). |
| 265. |
17 C.F.R. § 202.1(d). |
| 266. |
Id. |
| 267. |
Bartkus, supra note 264, at 203. |
| 268. |
Roosevelt v. E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co., 958 F.2d 416, 423 (D.C. Cir. 1992). |
| 269. |
Div. of Corp. Fin., Informal Procedures Regarding Shareholder Proposals, SEC (Nov. 21, 2022), https://www.sec.gov/rules-regulations/shareholder-proposals/division-corporation-finance-informal-procedures-regarding-shareholder-proposals https://perma.cc/S2G3-BNVK. |
| 270. |
Id. |
| 271. |
Id. Some courts have said that SEC no-action letters, while not binding, constitute persuasive authority. Schatzki v. Weiser Capital Mgmt., LLC, 2016 WL 6662264 at *5 (S.D.N.Y. Nov. 9, 2016); Apache Corp. v. New York City Emp. Ret. Sys., 621 F. Supp. 2d 444, 449 (S.D. Tex. 2008). |
| 272. |
Haseley & Ising, supra note 65 § 12.03[I]. In 1992, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit held that shareholders have a private right of action under Rule 14a-8, confirming the existence of a right that had previously been "widely assumed." Roosevelt, 958 F.2d at 419. |
| 273. |
Haseley & Ising, supra note 65 § 12.03[I]. |
| 274. |
Id. |
| 275. |
Mueller Testimony, supra note 261, at 6. |
| 276. |
Mishra, supra note 212. |
| 277. |
Haan, supra note 220, at 277. |
| 278. |
Id. at 264. |
| 279. |
Id. at 267–68. |
| 280. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(b); Procedural Requirements and Resubmission Thresholds Under Exchange Act Rule 14a-8, 85 Fed. Reg. 70240 (Nov. 4, 2020) (codified at 17 C.F.R. pt. 240). |
| 281. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(b)(1)(i). In June 2025, a federal district court rejected a lawsuit alleging that the SEC's 2020 amendments to Rule 14a-8 violated the Administrative Procedure Act. Interfaith Ctr. on Corp. Resp. v. SEC, 768 F. Supp. 3d 97 (D.D.C. 2025). |
| 282. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(b)(2). |
| 283. |
Id. § 240.14a-8(b)(1)(ii)–(iii). |
| 284. |
Id. § 240.14a-8(b)(1)(iii). |
| 285. |
Id. § 240.14a-8(c). |
| 286. |
Id. § 240.14a-8(d), (e)(2). If the company did not hold an annual meeting the previous year or if the date of the annual meeting has been changed by more than 30 days from the date of the previous year's meeting, the deadline is "a reasonable time before the company begins to print and send its proxy materials." Id. § 240.14a-8(e)(2). |
| 287. |
Id. § 240.14a-8(h)(1). |
| 288. |
Id. § 240.14a-8(h)(2). |
| 289. |
Id. § 240.14a-8(f). |
| 290. |
Id. |
| 291. |
Id. § 240.14a-8(i)(1). Requests for no-action relief that are based on state or international law must be accompanied by an opinion of counsel. Id. § 240.14a-8(j)(iii). |
| 292. |
Solicitation of Proxies Under the Act, 7 Fed. Reg. 10655, 10656 (Dec. 22, 1942). |
| 293. |
Med. Comm. for Human Rts. v. SEC, 432 F.2d 659, 677 (D.C. Cir. 1970). |
| 294. |
Id. |
| 295. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 141(a); Model Bus. Corp. Act § 8.01(b). |
| 296. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(i)(1) note. |
| 297. |
John G. Matsusaka et al., Can Shareholder Proposals Hurt Shareholders? Evidence from Securities and Exchange Commission No-Action-Letter Decisions, 64 J. L. & Econ. 107, 115 (2021). |
| 298. |
Atkins Speech, supra note 8. |
| 299. |
Kyle Pinder, The Non-Binding Bind: Reframing Precatory Stockholder Proposals under Delaware Law, 15 Mich. Bus. & Entrepreneurial L. Rev. (forthcoming), https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=5418534 https://perma.cc/LAX3-KWWN. |
| 300. |
Atkins Speech, supra note 8. |
| 301. |
Id. |
| 302. |
Id. |
| 303. |
Lewis & Foda, supra note 243. |
| 304. |
S&C Memo, supra note 63. |
| 305. |
Ryan J. Adams et al., SEC Chairman Atkins Casts Doubt on the Validity of Precatory Shareholder Proposals, Morrison & Foerster LLP (Oct. 10, 2025), https://www.mofo.com/resources/insights/251010-sec-doubt-validity-precatory-shareholder-proposals https://perma.cc/NN7Q-PWZ8. |
| 306. |
Jill Fisch et al., Stockholder Proposals—Law and Policy Considerations, Harv. L. Sch. F. on Corp. Gov. (Dec. 9, 2025), https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2025/12/09/stockholder-proposals-law-and-policy-considerations/ https://perma.cc/S2WT-RDPL. |
| 307. |
John Filar Atwood, Atkins Remarks May Not be Death Knell for Precatory Proposals, Panelists Say, VitalLaw (Nov. 10, 2025), https://www.vitallaw.com/news/proxies-atkins-remarks-may-not-be-death-knell-for-precatory-proposals-panelists-say/sld01a5e5302bf1ad48c5a2fdec208fbaf2f5 https://perma.cc/89NT-3HKD. |
| 308. |
Atkins Speech, supra note 8. |
| 309. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 211(b). |
| 310. |
Mohsen Manesh, The Corporate Contract & The Private Ordering of Shareholder Proposals, 50 J. Corp. L. 1, 29 (2024). |
| 311. |
Brett McDonnell, Shareholder Bylaws, Shareholder Nominations, and Poison Pills, 3 Berkeley Bus. L.J. 205, 254 (2005) (explaining that precatory proposals "have only a shadowy presence in state law," with nothing authorizing or forbidding them). |
| 312. |
Pinder, supra note 299. |
| 313. |
Fisch et al., supra note 306. |
| 314. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 121. |
| 315. |
Fisch et al., supra note 306. |
| 316. |
Id. |
| 317. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, §§ 102, 109; Model Bus. Corp. Act §§ 2.02, 2.06 (2025). |
| 318. |
Gow v. Consol. Coppermines Corp., 165 A. 136, 140 (Del. Ch. 1933). |
| 319. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 102(a)(1), (a)(4); Model Bus. Corp. Act § 2.02(a)(1)-(2). |
| 320. | |
| 321. |
Id. § 242(b); Model Bus. Corp. Act § 10.03. |
| 322. |
SEC Staff Legal Bulletin No. 14D (Nov. 7, 2008) [hereinafter SLB 14D], https://www.sec.gov/rules-regulations/staff-guidance/staff-legal-bulletins/shareholder-proposals-staff-legal-bulletin-no-14d-cf https://perma.cc/9MHY-VCMJ. |
| 323. |
Gow, 165 A. at 140. |
| 324. |
Megan Wischmeier Shaner, Interpreting Organizational "Contracts" and the Private Ordering of Public Company Governance, 60 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 985, 994 (2019). Bylaws must be consistent with state law and a company's charter. Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 109(b). |
| 325. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 109(a); Model Bus. Corp. Act § 10.20(a). |
| 326. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 109(a). In some other states, boards have this power by default. Model Bus. Corp. Act § 10.20(b). |
| 327. |
Ann M. Lipton, Manufactured Consent: The Problem of Arbitration Clauses in Corporate Charters and Bylaws, 104 Geo. L.J. 583, 589 n.25 (2016). |
| 328. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 109(a). |
| 329. |
See Honabach & Sargent, supra note 67 § 5:51. |
| 330. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 141(a); Model Bus. Corp. Act § 8.01(b). |
| 331. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 141(a). |
| 332. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(i)(1) note. |
| 333. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 109(b). |
| 334. |
Lawrence A. Hamermesh, Corporate Democracy and Stockholder-Adopted By-Laws: Taking Back the Street?, 73 Tul. L. Rev. 409, 428–30 (1998). |
| 335. |
See id. at 436 (assuming that a bylaw requiring a corporation to buy a certain brand of pencil would be invalid). |
| 336. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 141(a). |
| 337. |
Jeffrey N. Gordon, "Just Say Never?" Poison Pills, Deadhand Pills, and Shareholder-Adopted Bylaws: An Essay for Warren Buffett, 19 Cardozo L. Rev. 511, 546–47 (1997). |
| 338. |
Haseley & Ising, supra note 65 § 12.04[C]. |
| 339. |
953 A.2d 227 (Del. 2008). |
| 340. |
Id. at 230. |
| 341. |
Id. at 231. |
| 342. |
Id. at 232. |
| 343. |
Id. at 235–37. |
| 344. |
Id. at 236. |
| 345. |
Id. at 236–37. |
| 346. |
Id. at 237. |
| 347. |
Id. at 240. |
| 348. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 113. |
| 349. |
Gumbs & Brown, supra note 262, at A-36. |
| 350. |
Id. |
| 351. |
975 P.2d 907, 909 & n.3 (Okla. 1999). Earlier in the litigation, a federal district court had ordered the company to include the proposed bylaw amendment in its proxy materials. Int'l Bhd. of Teamsters Gen. Fund v. Fleming Cos., Inc., 1997 WL 996768 (W.D. Okla. Feb. 19, 1997). On appeal, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit certified the question of the proposed amendment's permissibility to the Oklahoma Supreme Court. Int'l Bhd. of Teamsters Gen. Fund v. Fleming Cos., Inc., 975 P.2d 907, 910 (Okla. 1999). Before the Oklahoma Supreme Court issued its decision, the proposed amendment passed with approximately 60% of votes in its favor. Id. |
| 352. |
Fleming Cos., Inc., 975 P.2d at 911. |
| 353. |
Id. at 912. |
| 354. |
Franklin Gevurtz, Corporation Law 200–01 (3d ed. 2021). |
| 355. |
McDonnell, supra note 311, at 228. |
| 356. |
John C. Coffee, Jr., The Bylaw Battlefield: Can Institutions Change the Outcome of Corporate Control Contests?, 51 U. Miami L. Rev. 605, 615 (1997). |
| 357. |
Id. |
| 358. |
See Hamermesh, supra note 334, at 444 (arguing, before the CA decision, that bylaws requiring shareholder votes on certain issues would likely be invalid notwithstanding their "procedural" character). |
| 359. |
See Ben Walther, Bylaw Governance, 20 Fordham J. Corp. & Fin. L. 399, 400 (2015) (indicating that the scope of shareholders' bylaw power remains "ill-defined" under Delaware law). |
| 360. |
Gumbs & Brown, supra note 262, at A-37. During this period, other no-action responses involving bylaw proposals that implicated unsettled state law issues expressed no view as to whether the proposals were excludable. Id. |
| 361. |
Id.; Robert J. Haft et al., Analysis of Key SEC No-Action Letters and Compliance and Disclosure Interpretations § 10:19 (2025) (characterizing this approach as placing the risk of legal uncertainty on proponents of shareholder proposals). |
| 362. |
Haseley & Ising, supra note 65 § 12.04[D]. |
| 363. |
Id. In 2002, for example, SEC staff concluded that a company could not exclude a poison pill bylaw proposal as improper under California law, reasoning that the company had not carried its burden of establishing excludability. Sw. Gas Corp., SEC No-Action Letter, 2002 WL 597378 (Mar. 19, 2002). |
| 364. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(i)(2). |
| 365. |
Gumbs & Brown, supra note 262, at A-33. |
| 366. |
Id. |
| 367. |
Id. |
| 368. |
E.g., Advanced Photonix, Inc., SEC No-Action Letter, 2014 WL 1411041 (May 15, 2014). |
| 369. |
E.g., BankAmerica Corp., SEC No-Action Letter, 1999 WL 107732 (Feb. 24, 1999). |
| 370. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(i)(3). |
| 371. |
SEC Staff Legal Bulletin No. 14B (Sept. 15, 2004), https://www.sec.gov/rules-regulations/staff-guidance/staff-legal-bulletins/shareholder-proposals-staff-legal-bulletin-no-14b-cf https://perma.cc/N5JH-BDU8. |
| 372. |
Id. |
| 373. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(i)(4). |
| 374. |
E.g., Morgan Stanley, SEC No-Action Letter, 2004 WL 111573 (Jan. 14, 2004). |
| 375. |
Cabot Corp., SEC No-Action Letter, 1985 WL 54461 (Oct. 30, 1985). |
| 376. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(i)(5). |
| 377. |
1952 Amendments, supra note 73, at *8. |
| 378. |
1972 Amendments, supra note 101, at *4. |
| 379. |
1976 Amendments, supra note 61, at *9. |
| 380. |
Id. (emphasis added). |
| 381. |
Id. |
| 382. |
1983 Amendments, supra note 120, at *11. In 1997, the SEC proposed an amendment to the relevance exclusion that would have adopted a purely economic standard for relevance by eliminating the "otherwise significantly related" language. 1997 Proposed Amendments, supra note 140, at *9. The SEC ultimately decided not to adopt that change. 1998 Amendments, supra note 142, at *12. |
| 383. |
Haseley & Ising, supra note 65 § 12.09[B]. |
| 384. |
1982 Proposed Amendments, supra note 113, at *16. |
| 385. |
618 F. Supp. 554 (D.D.C. 1985); see also Gumbs & Brown, supra note 262, at A-56 (explaining that Lovenheim "had a lasting impact on no-action positions under Rule 14a-8(i)(5)"). |
| 386. |
Lovenheim, 618 F. Supp. at 556. |
| 387. |
Id. at 559. |
| 388. |
Id. at 561 & n.16. |
| 389. |
Id. at 561. |
| 390. |
Id. at 558. |
| 391. |
Id. at 561 n.16. |
| 392. |
Lincoln Nat'l Corp., SEC No-Action Letter, 1999 WL 160353 (Mar. 24, 1999). |
| 393. |
Procter & Gamble Co., SEC No-Action Letter, 2003 WL 21919560 (Aug. 11, 2003). |
| 394. |
SEC Staff Legal Bulletin No. 14I (Nov. 1, 2017), https://www.sec.gov/rules-regulations/staff-guidance/staff-legal-bulletins/shareholder-proposals-staff-legal-bulletin-no-14i-cf https://perma.cc/RY5F-H8S5. |
| 395. |
Id. |
| 396. |
Id. |
| 397. |
Id. In contrast, SLB 14I indicated that SEC staff would generally view "substantive governance matters" as being "significantly related" to almost all companies. Id. |
| 398. |
Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). |
| 399. |
Id. |
| 400. |
SEC Staff Legal Bulletin No. 14L (Nov. 3, 2021) [hereinafter SLB 14L], https://www.sec.gov/rules-regulations/staff-guidance/staff-legal-bulletins/shareholder-proposals-staff-legal-bulletin-no-14l-cf https://perma.cc/G6H2-C8X5. |
| 401. |
SEC Staff Legal Bulletin No. 14M (Feb. 12, 2025) [hereinafter SLB 14M], https://www.sec.gov/about/shareholder-proposals-staff-legal-bulletin-no-14m-cf https://perma.cc/FUN9-G873. |
| 402. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(i)(6). |
| 403. |
Brent A. Olson, Publicly Traded Corporations Handbook § 10:17 (2025); Donovan Gibbons, Excluding Proposals in the Absence of Corporate Authority, 94 Denv. L. Rev. Online 384, 389–90 (2017). |
| 404. |
Gumbs & Brown, supra note 262, at A-61. |
| 405. |
Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 211(b); Model Bus. Corp. Act § 8.03(c). |
| 406. |
See SEC Staff Legal Bulletin No. 14C (June 28, 2005), https://www.sec.gov/rules-regulations/staff-guidance/staff-legal-bulletins/shareholder-proposals-staff-legal-bulletin-no-14c-cf https://perma.cc/3XLE-DQ34. |
| 407. |
Id. |
| 408. |
Id. |
| 409. |
Id. |
| 410. |
Id. |
| 411. |
SLB 14D, supra note 322. |
| 412. |
Id. |
| 413. |
Id. |
| 414. |
Id. |
| 415. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(i)(7). |
| 416. |
1997 Proposed Amendments, supra note 140, at *13. |
| 417. |
Haseley & Ising, supra note 65 § 12.06. |
| 418. |
Marc S. Gerber & Jeongu Gim, Shareholder Proposal No-Action Requests in the 2025 Proxy Season: A Continuing Surge in Requests and a Favorable Regulatory Environment, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP (Sept. 25, 2025), https://www.skadden.com/insights/publications/2025/09/insights-september-2025/corporate/shareholder-proposal-noaction-requests-in-the-2025-proxy-season https://perma.cc/986S-7QKD. |
| 419. |
1954 Amendments, supra note 74, at *4. |
| 420. |
Aranow & Einhorn, supra note 259 § 16.04[G]. |
| 421. |
1976 Amendments, supra note 61, at *11. |
| 422. |
Id. |
| 423. |
Id. |
| 424. |
Id. at *12. |
| 425. |
1998 Amendments, supra note 142, at *4. |
| 426. |
Id. |
| 427. |
Id. The SEC has taken the position that proposals requesting the preparation of a report or the formation of a board committee are to be analyzed based on whether the subject matter of the report or committee involves a matter relating to ordinary business operations. 1983 Amendments, supra note 120, at *7. |
| 428. |
1998 Amendments, supra note 142, at *4. |
| 429. |
Id. at *5. |
| 430. |
Id. |
| 431. |
958 F.2d 416, 425–28 (D.C. Cir. 1992). |
| 432. |
Id. |
| 433. |
Gumbs & Brown, supra note 262, at A-67. |
| 434. |
1998 Amendments, supra note 142, at *3; Haseley & Ising, supra note 65 § 12.06. |
| 435. |
Manesh, supra note 310, at 12 & n.83. |
| 436. |
1998 Amendments, supra note 142, at *3. |
| 437. |
1992 Cracker Barrel No-Action Letter, supra note 126. |
| 438. |
Id. |
| 439. |
Id. |
| 440. |
Haseley & Ising, supra note 65 § 12.06[C]. |
| 441. |
1998 Amendments, supra note 142, at *3. |
| 442. |
SEC Staff Legal Bulletin No. 14K (Oct. 16, 2019), https://www.sec.gov/rules-regulations/staff-guidance/staff-legal-bulletins/staff-legal-bulletin-14k-shareholder-proposals https://perma.cc/XZ63-DRF2. |
| 443. |
Id. |
| 444. |
Id. |
| 445. |
Id. |
| 446. |
Id. |
| 447. |
Id. |
| 448. |
Id. |
| 449. |
Id. |
| 450. |
Id. |
| 451. |
Id. |
| 452. |
Id. |
| 453. |
SLB 14L, supra note 400. |
| 454. |
Id. |
| 455. |
Id. |
| 456. |
Id. |
| 457. |
Id. |
| 458. |
Id. |
| 459. |
E.g., Maia Gez et al., A Win for Environmental and Social Shareholder Proponents? Corp Fin Issues SLB 14L, Rescinding Prior SLBs on Economic Relevance and Ordinary Business Exclusions, White & Case LLP (Nov. 4, 2021), https://www.whitecase.com/insight-alert/win-environmental-and-social-shareholder-proponents-corp-fin-issues-slb-14l https://perma.cc/73LF-29ST. |
| 460. |
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, Shareholder Proposal Developments During the 2022 Proxy Season 2 (2022), https://www.gibsondunn.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/shareholder-proposal-developments-during-the-2022-proxy-season.pdf https://perma.cc/BNC6-BZLG. |
| 461. |
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, Shareholder Proposal Developments During the 2024 Proxy Season 2 (2024), https://www.gibsondunn.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/shareholder-proposal-developments-during-the-2024-proxy-season.pdf https://perma.cc/XK5P-ZD5A. |
| 462. |
SLB 14M, supra note 401. |
| 463. |
Id. |
| 464. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(i)(8). |
| 465. |
Jill E. Fisch, The Destructive Ambiguity of Federal Proxy Access, 61 Emory L.J. 435, 444–45 (2012). |
| 466. |
Id. at 444. |
| 467. |
Id. |
| 468. |
AFSCME v. AIG, 462 F.3d 121, 131 (2d Cir. 2006). |
| 469. |
Shareholder Proposals Relating to the Election of Directors, Exchange Act Release No. 34-56914, 2007 WL 4442610 (Dec. 6, 2007). |
| 470. |
Facilitating Shareholder Director Nominations, Exchange Act Release No. 34-62764, 2010 WL 3343532, at *2 (Aug. 25, 2010) [hereinafter Proxy Access Rule]. While the election exclusion no longer prohibits proxy access proposals, such proposals must comply with the other provisions of Rule 14a-8. Id. at *103 n.685. |
| 471. |
In modifying the election exclusion, the 2010 amendments codified several traditional grounds for excluding proposals that attempt to use Rule 14a-8 to circumvent standard director election procedures. Gumbs & Brown, supra note 262, at A-82–83. |
| 472. |
Proxy Access Rule, supra note 470, at *14. |
| 473. |
Bus. Roundtable v. SEC, 647 F.3d 1144 (D.C. Cir. 2011). |
| 474. |
Avrohom J. Kess, Proxy Access Proposals, Harv. L. Sch. F. on Corp. Gov. (Aug. 10, 2015), https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2015/08/10/proxy-access-proposals/ https://perma.cc/2PWU-MDJV. |
| 475. |
Some proxy access proposals were binding bylaw amendments, but the majority were nonbinding precatory proposals. Bernard S. Sharfman, What Shareholder Proposals on Proxy Access Tell Us About its Value, Yale J. Regul. Bulletin (2016). |
| 476. |
Mishra, supra note 212. |
| 477. |
Gregory et al., supra note 209. |
| 478. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(i)(9). |
| 479. |
Honabach & Sargent, supra note 67 § 5:42. |
| 480. |
Id. |
| 481. |
Whole Foods Mkt., Inc., SEC No-Action Letter, 2014 WL 5426272 (Dec. 1, 2014). |
| 482. |
SEC Staff Legal Bulletin No. 14H (Oct. 22, 2015), https://www.sec.gov/rules-regulations/staff-guidance/staff-legal-bulletins/shareholder-proposals-staff-legal-bulletin-no-14h-cf https://perma.cc/PSM2-MLXU. |
| 483. |
Id. |
| 484. |
Id. |
| 485. |
Id. |
| 486. |
Id. |
| 487. |
Id. |
| 488. |
Honabach & Sargent, supra note 67 § 5:42. |
| 489. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(i)(10). |
| 490. |
Texaco, Inc., SEC No-Action Letter, 1991 WL 178690 (Mar. 28, 1991). |
| 491. |
Gumbs & Brown, supra note 262, at A-94. |
| 492. |
Haseley & Ising, supra note 65 § 12.08 (citing examples). |
| 493. |
Id. |
| 494. |
Gumbs & Brown, supra note 262, at A-95. |
| 495. |
Haseley & Ising, supra note 65 § 12.08. |
| 496. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(i)(11). |
| 497. |
Gumbs & Brown, supra note 262, at A-98–99. |
| 498. |
Johnson & Johnson, SEC No-Action Letter, 2011 WL 6837553 (Feb. 3, 2012). |
| 499. |
Id. |
| 500. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(i)(11). |
| 501. |
Id. § 240.14a-8(i)(12). |
| 502. |
Procedural Requirements and Resubmission Thresholds Under Exchange Act Rule 14a-8, 85 Fed. Reg. 70240, 70258 (Nov. 4, 2020). |
| 503. |
Id. |
| 504. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-8(i)(13). |
| 505. |
E.g., Microsoft Corp., SEC No-Action Letter, 2002 WL 1677440 (July 19, 2002). |
| 506. |
E.g., Constellation Energy Partners LLC, SEC No-Action Letter, 2011 WL 2906770 (July 18, 2011). |
| 507. |
See supra "The Future of Shareholder Proposals." |
| 508. |
Atkins Speech, supra note 8. |
| 509. |
SEC Regulatory Flexibility Agenda, supra note 9. |
| 510. |
Daniel E. Lazaroff, Promoting Corporate Democracy and Social Responsibility: The Need to Reform the Federal Proxy Rules on Shareholder Proposals, 50 Rutgers L. Rev. 33, 80–84 (1997); Schwartz, supra note 84, at 430. |
| 511. |
See supra "Social Policy Proposals in the 1960s and 1970s" & "Environmental and Social Proposals." |
| 512. |
Schwartz, supra note 84, at 481. |
| 513. |
See supra "Environmental and Social Proposals." |
| 514. |
Robert P. Bartlett III & Ryan Bubb, Corporate Social Responsibility Through Shareholder Governance, 97 S. Cal. L. Rev. 417, 434 (2024). |
| 515. |
Id. |
| 516. |
In the academic literature, this approach is sometimes called "shareholder welfare" maximization, as distinct from the traditional corporate objective of shareholder value maximization. Oliver Hart & Luigi Zingales, Companies Should Maximize Shareholder Welfare Not Market Value, 2 J. Fin. & Acct. 247 (2017). Its advocates argue that, while shareholders can sometimes promote social goals most efficiently by simply donating their stock wealth to charity, there are some instances in which a corporation's money-making activities are "inseparable" from social concerns. Id. at 249. For example, in their view, it is likely more efficient for shareholders to pressure a corporation to stop selling a harmful (but legal) product than it is for shareholders to donate to organizations advocating a ban of that product. Id. |
| 517. |
Lipton, supra note 228, at 1594. |
| 518. |
Id. |
| 519. |
Bartlett & Bubb, supra note 514, at 436. |
| 520. |
Id. |
| 521. |
Jeffrey N. Gordon, Systematic Stewardship, 47 J. Corp. L. 627, 631 (2022); John C. Coffee, Jr., The Future of Disclosure: ESG, Common Ownership, and Systematic Risk, 2021 Colum. Bus. L. Rev. 602, 610 (2021); Madison Condon, Externalities and the Common Owner, 95 Wash. L. Rev. 1, 12–18 (2020). Some strategies that follow from portfolio primacy may not correspond to traditional notions of corporate social responsibility. Portfolio primacy might, for example, suggest that rival companies compete less intensely or even outright collude to maximize industry-wide profits. Marcel Kahan & Edward Rock, Corporate Governance Welfarism, 15 J. Legal Analysis 108, 111 (2023). Advocates of portfolio primacy have emphasized areas in which intra-portfolio externalities also constitute social externalities. E.g., Why System Stewardship?, The Shareholder Commons (2025), https://theshareholdercommons.com/system-stewardship-primer/ https://perma.cc/24TE-TCRU (last visited Jan. 7, 2026). |
| 522. |
Ann M. Lipton, What We Talk About When We Talk About Shareholder Primacy, 69 Case Western Res. L. Rev. 863, 878 (2019) ("As though in concession to the notion that it would be illegal for managers to act for non-wealth-maximizing reasons, it is practically de rigueur for shareholder proposals—even those plainly grounded in ethical concerns—to offer up some fig leaf of a financial justification."). |
| 523. |
E.g., The Corporate Proxy Flight From ESG, Wall St. J. (Nov. 17, 2025), https://www.wsj.com/opinion/proxy-voting-esg-committee-to-unleash-prosperity-investment-firms-7b165473. |
| 524. |
Lipton, supra note 228, at 1593. |
| 525. |
Accountable Capitalism Act, S. 3348, 115th Cong. § 5(c)(1)(A)(ii) (2018). |
| 526. |
Griffin, supra note 236. |
| 527. |
Griffith, supra note 168, at 1027 ("It is a strained interpretation of fiduciary duty that would allow a mutual fund intermediary to sacrifice the college or retirement savings of one investor in favor of a social policy favored by another."). |
| 528. |
Jill Fisch & Jeff Schwartz, Corporate Democracy and the Intermediary Voting Dilemma, 102 Tex. L. Rev. 1, 7–8 (2023). |
| 529. |
See infra "Institutional Voting." |
| 530. |
Gevurtz, supra note 354, at 335. Some of these statutes are limited to the takeover context, while others extend more broadly. Id. |
| 531. |
Stephen M. Bainbridge, The Profit Motive: Defending Shareholder Value Maximization 71 (2023). |
| 532. |
Id. |
| 533. |
E.g., Lynn Stout, The Shareholder Value Myth 24–32 (2012); Einer Elhauge, Sacrificing Corporate Profits in the Public Interest, 80 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 733 (2005). |
| 534. |
McRitchie v. Zuckerberg, 315 A.3d 518, 544 (Del. Ch. 2024) ("The duty of loyalty includes a duty of good faith, which requires that directors subjectively seek to maximize the value of the firm for the benefit of its stockholders."); Frederick Hsu Living Tr. v. ODN Holding Corp., No. CV 12108–VCL, 2017 WL 1437308, at *17 (Del. Ch. Apr. 14, 2017) ("Delaware case law is clear that the board of directors of a for-profit corporation ... must, within the limits of its legal discretion, treat stockholder welfare as the only end, considering other interests only to the extent that doing so is rationally related to stockholder welfare.") (quotation marks omitted); In re Trados Inc. S'holder Litig., 73 A.3d 17, 37 (Del. Ch. 2013) ("In terms of the standard of conduct, the duty of loyalty therefore mandates that directors maximize the value of the corporation over the long-term for the benefit of the providers of equity capital."); eBay Domestic Holdings, Inc. v. Newmark, 16 A.3d 1, 33 (Del. Ch. 2010) ("Promoting, protecting, or pursuing nonstockholder considerations must lead at some point to value for stockholders."). |
| 535. |
Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings, 506 A.2d 173, 182 (Del. 1986); see also N. Am. Catholic Educ. Programming Found., Inc. v. Gheewalla, 930 A.2d 92, 101 (Del. 2007) ("The directors of Delaware corporations have 'the legal responsibility to manage the business of a corporation for the benefit of its shareholder owners.'") (quoting Malone v. Brincat, 722 A.2d 5, 9 (Del. 1998)). This language from Revlon describes the standard of conduct for ordinary-course business decisions. Revlon, 506 A.2d at 182. Revlon held that, when selling a company, directors may not consider the interests of non-shareholders even for instrumental purposes. Id. |
| 536. |
In re MultiPlan Corp. S'holders Litig., 268 A.3d 784, 809 (Del. Ch. 2022) ("When determining whether [directors] have breached their fiduciary duties, Delaware corporate law distinguishes between the standard of conduct and the standard of review. The standard of conduct ... describes what directors are expected to do and is defined by the content of the duties of loyalty and care. The standard of review is the test that a court applies when evaluating whether directors have met the standard of conduct.") (quotation marks and citations omitted). |
| 537. |
In re Trados Inc., 73 A.3d at 44. |
| 538. |
In re Dollar Thrifty S'holder Litig., 14 A.3d 573, 598 (Del. Ch. 2010). |
| 539. |
David Millon, Two Models of Corporate Social Responsibility, 46 Wake Forest L. Rev. 523, 527 (2011). |
| 540. |
See supra notes 534–35. |
| 541. |
Leo E. Strine, Jr., The Dangers of Denial: The Need for a Clear-Eyed Understanding of the Power and Accountability Structure Established by the Delaware General Corporation Law, 50 Wake Forest L. Rev. 761, 776–77 (2015). Strine is a former Chief Justice of the Delaware Supreme Court. |
| 542. |
The Delaware Chancery Court confronted one such case in eBay Domestic Holdings, Inc. v. Newmark, 16 A.3d 1 (Del. Ch. 2010). In eBay, the court held that directors breached their fiduciary duties by adopting a poison pill to deter a minority shareholder from acquiring a controlling stake. Id. at 32–35. The directors attempted to justify the pill on the ground that the minority shareholder sought to alter the company's "public-service mission" in favor of "increased monetization." Id. at 32. The court rejected this justification because the directors "did not make any serious attempt to prove that [the company's] culture, which rejects any attempt to further monetize its services, translates into increased profitability for stockholders." Id. at 33. "Having chosen a for-profit corporate form," the court explained, directors "are bound by the fiduciary duties and standards that accompany that form," including a duty to "promote the value of the corporation for the benefit of its stockholders." Id. at 34. Another confessional case, Dodge v. Ford Motor Co., is a fixture in the corporate law canon. 170 N.W. 668 (Mich. 1919). In Dodge, the Michigan Supreme Court held that Henry Ford breached his duties to minority shareholders by refusing to pay a dividend based on an admitted desire to benefit non-shareholder constituencies. Id. at 683–85. Applying Michigan law, the Court explained: "[a] business corporation is organized and carried on primarily for the profit of the stockholders. The powers of the directors are to be employed for that end. The discretion of directors is to be exercised in the choice of means to attain that end, and does not extend to a change in the end itself, to the reduction of profits, or to the nondistribution of profits among stockholders in order to devote them to other purposes." Id. at 684. |
| 543. |
Griffith, supra note 168, at 1018–19. |
| 544. |
Roberto Tallarita, The Limits of Portfolio Primacy, 76 Vand. L. Rev. 511, 533–36 (2023). |
| 545. |
Id. |
| 546. |
John D. Morley, Too Big to Be Activist, 92 S. Cal. L. Rev. 1407, 1412 (2019). |
| 547. |
Ann M. Lipton, Family Loyalty: Mutual Fund Voting and Fiduciary Obligation, 19 Tenn. J. Bus. L. 175, 180 (2017). |
| 548. |
Morley, supra note 546, at 1417. |
| 549. |
See supra note 521. |
| 550. |
Tallarita, supra note 544, at 563–65; but see Fisch & Schwartz, supra note 528, at 30 (characterizing mutual fund advisers' fiduciary duty to vote shares in the best interests of their clients as "toothless" and explaining that, to the authors' knowledge, "there has not been a successful claim that institutional investors have failed the best-interest standard when voting shares in their portfolio companies"). In a recent article, a pair of scholars concluded that State Street generally appears to vote proxies with an aim of maximizing the value of "host companies"—i.e., that State Street votes shares in Company X with an aim of maximizing the value of Company X. Henry T. C. Hu & Lawrence A. Hamermesh, Reconceptualizing Stockholder "Disinterestedness": Transformative Institutional Investor Changes and Motivational Misalignments in Voting, 80 Bus. Law. 311, 361 (2025). They concluded that Vanguard, in contrast, appears to pursue a policy of "fund-by-fund portfolio value maximization," whereby it votes proxies held by a Vanguard fund with an aim of maximizing the value of that particular fund. Id. at 366. |
| 551. |
315 A.3d 518, 528 (Del. Ch. 2024). |
| 552. |
See id. at 564 ("The fiduciary duties owed by directors of a Delaware corporation require the directors to seek to maximize the value of the corporation over the long-term for the benefit of the stockholders as residual claimants to the value created by the specific firm that the directors serve. It does not mean striving to maximize value for diversified investors who own equity investments across all firms."). |
| 553. |
Id. |
| 554. |
E.g., Mike Pence, Republicans Can Stop ESG Political Bias, Wall St. J. (May 26, 2022). |
| 555. |
Mueller Testimony, supra note 261, at 16. |
| 556. |
E.g., Proxy Power and Proposal Abuse, Hearing Before the H. Comm. on Fin. Servs., 119th Cong. at 1–2 (Sept. 10, 2025) (statement of Brad Lander, New York City Comptroller). |
| 557. |
See supra "Governance Proposals." |
| 558. |
Id. |
| 559. |
E.g., Bryce C. Tingle, Hard Lessons in Corporate Governance 120–22, 131–32, 174 (2024) (discussing empirical scholarship regarding shareholder proposals and staggered boards); Griffith, supra note 166, at 1032 (arguing that different governance arrangements may be optimal for different firms and that recent empirical scholarship "demonstrates that many widely held views concerning the effects of corporate governance are wrong or, at least, overstated"). |
| 560. |
Tingle, supra note 559, at 120, 220–21. |
| 561. |
George W. Dent, Jr., SEC Rule 14a-8: A Study in Regulatory Failure, 30 N.Y. L. Rev. 1, 14–16 (1985); Liebeler, supra note 108, at 454. |
| 562. |
Bonnie G. Buchanan et al., Shareholder Proposal Rules and Practice: Evidence from a Comparison of the United States and United Kingdom, 49 Am. Bus. L.J. 739, 783 (2012). |
| 563. |
Patrick J. Ryan, Rule 14a-8, Institutional Shareholder Proposals, and Corporate Democracy, 23 Ga. L. Rev. 97, 112 (1988). |
| 564. |
Fisch, supra note 33, at 1143–44. Some federal courts appear to have endorsed this reasoning. E.g., New York City Emps. Ret. Sys. v. Am. Brands, Inc., 634 F. Supp. 1382, 1386 (S.D.N.Y. 1986) (stating that the omission of a shareholder proposal from proxy materials in violation of Rule 14a-8 is "inherently misleading"). |
| 565. |
George W. Dent, Jr., Proxy Regulation in Search of a Purpose: A Reply to Professor Ryan, 23 Ga. L. Rev. 815, 820 (1989). |
| 566. |
Id. at 819–20. |
| 567. |
Id. at 819; Liebeler, supra note 108, at 453. |
| 568. |
Dent, supra note 565, at 821 (modifying previous criticism of Rule 14a-8 along these lines). |
| 569. |
Id. at 822–25. |
| 570. |
E.g., Lazaroff, supra note 510, at 78–79; see also Med. Comm. for Human Rts. v. SEC, 432 F.2d 659, 681 (D.C. Cir. 1970) (interpreting Section 14(a) of the Exchange Act as embodying a "philosophy of corporate democracy"). |
| 571. |
Ryan, supra note 563, at 112. |
| 572. |
Lazaroff, supra note 510, at 79. |
| 573. |
Haan, supra note 220, at 291. |
| 574. |
E.g., Griffith, supra note 76, at 466. |
| 575. |
Stephen Bainbridge, A Corporation is Not a Democracy, Bainbridge on Corporations (Sept. 14, 2025), https://www.bainbridgeoncorporations.com/p/a-corporation-is-not-a-democracy https://perma.cc/E9D9-NSX3. |
| 576. |
Id. |
| 577. |
Id. |
| 578. |
Grant M. Hayden & Matthew T. Bodie, A Democratic Participation Model for Corporate Governance, 109 Minn. L. Rev. 1579, 1612–51 (2025) (explaining that, "[i]n democratic political systems, participation rights are typically extended to people who have an interest or stake in governmental decision-making" and advocating the extension of voting rights to non-shareholder constituencies); Colleen A. Dunlavy, Social Conceptions of the Corporation: Insights from the History of Shareholder Voting Rights, 63 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 1347, 1354–55 (2006) (characterizing the one-vote-per-share model as "plutocratic," as distinct from a "democratic" model of one vote per shareholder, which was not uncommon in the early 1800s). |
| 579. |
Stop Woke Investing Act, H.R. 52, 119th Cong. § 2(b) (2025). |
| 580. |
Id. § 2(b)(1). |
| 581. |
Id. § 2(b)(3). |
| 582. |
Id. § 2(b)(2). |
| 583. |
H.R. 4657, 118th Cong. § 1 (2023). |
| 584. |
H.R. 4640, 118th Cong. § 1 (2023). |
| 585. |
Performance over Politics Act, H.R. 4641, 118th Cong. § 2 (2023). |
| 586. |
Id. |
| 587. |
No Expensive, Stifling Governance Act of 2023, H.R. 4644, 118th Cong. § 2 (2023). |
| 588. |
Id. § 2(a)(1)-(2). Specifically, the bill would have codified SEC staff's positions that (1) a proposal "substantially duplicates" another previously submitted proposal that will be included in a company's proxy materials if the two proposals share the same "principal thrust" or "principal focus," and (2) a company has "substantially implemented" a proposal if its policies, practices, or procedures "compare favorably" with those recommended by the proposal. Id. |
| 589. |
Id. § 2(b). The SEC's 2022 proposed rule would have amended (1) the "duplication" exclusion to specify that a proposal "substantially duplicates" another proposal for the same meeting if it "addresses the same subject matter and seeks the same objective by the same means," (2) the "substantial implementation" exclusion to allow companies to exclude a proposal if they have implemented its "essential elements," and (3) the "resubmission" exclusion to apply to proposals that "substantially duplicate" a previously voted-upon proposal, thereby aligning the "resubmission" standard with the "duplication" standard. Substantial Implementation, Duplication, and Resubmission of Shareholder Proposals Under Exchange Act Rule 14a-8, 87 Fed. Reg. 45052, 45055 (July 27, 2022). |
| 590. |
Business Over Activists Act, H.R. 4655, 118th Cong. § 2 (2023). |
| 591. |
Protecting Americans' Retirement Savings from Politics Act, H.R. 4767, 118th Cong. §§ 101, 202, 301, 401 (2023). |
| 592. |
Prioritizing Economic Growth Over Woke Policies Act, H.R. 4790, 118th Cong. Div. B-C (2024). |
| 593. |
E.g., Mueller Testimony, supra note 260, at 23. |
| 594. |
Stephen Bainbridge, SEC Chair Paul Atkins Continues His Focus on Reforming SEC Rule 14a-8 (The Shareholder Proposal Rule): Part II, Bainbridge on Corporations (Oct. 13, 2025), https://www.bainbridgeoncorporations.com/p/sec-chair-paul-atkins-continues-his https://perma.cc/586X-2NCT. |
| 595. |
Procedural Requirements and Resubmission Thresholds Under Exchange Act Rule 14a-8, 85 Fed. Reg. 70240, 70258, 70241 (Nov. 4, 2020) (internal quotation marks omitted). |
| 596. |
Kobi Kastiel & Yaron Nili, The Giant Shadow of Corporate Gadflies, 94 S. Cal. L. Rev. 569, 618–24 (2021). |
| 597. |
Procedural Requirements and Resubmission Thresholds Under Exchange Act Rule 14a-8, 84 Fed. Reg. 66485, 66483 (Dec. 4, 2019). |
| 598. |
Uyeda Speech, supra note 247. In popular commentary and the academic literature, these individuals are often referred to as "corporate gadflies." Kastiel & Nili, supra note 596, at 571. Commentators disagree as to whether that label is pejorative. Jonathan Kalodimos, A Gadfly's Perspective, Harv. L. Sch. F. on Corp. Gov. (Sept. 21, 2016), https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2016/09/21/a-gadflys-perspective/ https://perma.cc/3VGJ-AUZC. |
| 599. |
Bus. Roundtable, Responsible Shareholder Engagement and Long-Term Value Creation: Modernizing the Shareholder Proposal Process 2 (2016). |
| 600. |
Kastiel & Nili, supra note 596, at 592–97. |
| 601. |
Bainbridge, supra note 594 (suggesting an opt-out mechanism). |
| 602. |
1983 Amendments, supra note 120, at *1–2. |
| 603. |
Uyeda Speech, supra note 247. |
| 604. |
Id. |
| 605. |
Id. |
| 606. |
Atkins Speech, supra note 8. |
| 607. |
Manesh, supra note 310, at 25–26: Pinder, supra note 299. |
| 608. |
Manesh, supra note 310, at 36. |
| 609. |
Id. at 30. |
| 610. |
Id. at 27–31. |
| 611. |
Under Delaware law, such limits would be subject to equitable review even if facially valid. Id. at 31–35. It is possible that Delaware courts would deem certain restrictions—such as charter or bylaw provisions barring all precatory shareholder proposals—unreasonable and inequitable. Id. at 34. |
| 612. |
163 F.2d 511 (3d Cir. 1947). |
| 613. |
Id. at 515–18. |
| 614. |
Id. at 513. |
| 615. |
Id. at 517–18. |
| 616. |
Id. at 518. |
| 617. |
Id. |
| 618. |
E.g., Lucian A. Bebchuk & Scott Hirst, Private Ordering and the Proxy Access Debate, 65 Bus. Law. 329, 355 (2010). |
| 619. |
Manesh, supra note 310, at 42–44; Liebeler, supra note 108, at 461. |
| 620. |
Manesh, supra note 310, at 42–44; Liebeler, supra note 108, at 461–65. |
| 621. |
See supra "Institutional Investor Activism in the 1980s and 1990s" & "Governance Proposals." |
| 622. |
Ronald J. Gilson & Jeffrey N. Gordon, The Agency Costs of Agency Capitalism: Activist Investors and the Revaluation of Governance Rights, 113 Colum. L. Rev. 863, 865 (2013) (explaining that the shift from dispersed stock ownership to a regime in which ownership is concentrated in financial intermediaries gives rise to "a double set of agency relationships: between shareholders and managers and between beneficial owners and record owners"). |
| 623. |
Lucian A. Bebchuk, Alma Cohen & Scott Hirst, The Agency Problems of Institutional Investors, 31 J. Econ. Persp. 89, 90, 95–97 (2017). |
| 624. |
Id. |
| 625. |
Id. at 93. |
| 626. |
E.g., Paul G. Mahoney & Julia D. Mahoney, The New Separation of Ownership and Control: Institutional Investors and ESG, 2021 Colum. Bus. L. Rev. 840, 856 (2021). |
| 627. |
Michal Barzuza, Quinn Curtis & David H. Webber, Shareholder Value(s): Index Fund ESG Activism and the New Millennial Corporate Governance, 93 S. Cal. L. Rev. 1243 (2020). |
| 628. |
Mahoney & Mahoney, supra note 626, at 865–66. |
| 629. |
Jeff Schwartz, Stewardship Theater, 100 Wash. U. L. Rev. 1, 34–37 (2022). |
| 630. |
State Street Global Advisors, Global Proxy Voting and Engagement Policy 13 (2025), https://www.ssga.com/library-content/assets/pdf/global/asset-stewardship/proxy-voting-and-engagement-policy.pdf https://perma.cc/W597-BCF7; Vanguard, Proxy Voting Policy for U.S. Portfolio Companies 10 (2025), https://corporate.vanguard.com/content/dam/corp/advocate/investment-stewardship/pdf/policies-and-reports/us_proxy_voting_policy_2025.pdf https://perma.cc/3WA7-D6C3; BlackRock Investment Stewardship: Global Principles 14 (2024), https://www.blackrock.com/us/individual/literature/shareholder-letters/proxy-voting-guidelines.pdf https://perma.cc/4FPK-YDE7. |
| 631. |
Paul Rose, Proxy Advisors and Market Power: A Review of Institutional Investor Robovoting (Ohio State Legal Studies Rsch. Paper No. 631, 2021). |
| 632. |
E.g., James R. Copland, Index Funds Have Too Much Voting Power: A Proposal for Reform, Manhattan Inst. (Jan. 25, 2024), https://manhattan.institute/article/index-funds-have-too-much-voting-power-a-proposal-for-reform https://perma.cc/V9UX-6FS4. |
| 633. |
Caleb N. Griffin, Open Proxy, 99 Tul. L. Rev. 247, 269–72 (2024). |
| 634. |
Id. |
| 635. |
Id. at 272. |
| 636. |
Investor Democracy is Expected Act, S. 1670, 119th Cong. § 2 (2025). |
| 637. |
Copland, supra note 632 (stating that it is "not at all clear" that a pass-through program offered by BlackRock, which allowed investors to direct the voting of shares in accordance with proxy advisor plans, would satisfy the INDEX Act's requirements); see also Sahand Moarefy, The New Power Brokers: The Rise of Asset Manager Capitalism and the New Economic Order 136–40 (2024) (distinguishing "pure" pass-through voting from more limited systems of pass-through voting). |
| 638. |
Fisch & Schwartz, supra note 528, at 44. |
| 639. |
Bebchuk & Hirst, supra note 185, at 2118–19. |
| 640. |
Fisch & Schwartz, supra note 528, at 44. Because pass-through voting would deprive institutional investors of governance power, it is unlikely to be favored by those who believe that the primary problem with institutional investors is excessive passivity. E.g., Bebchuk & Hirst, supra note 185, at 2119. |
| 641. |
Griffin, supra note 633, at 282–85. |
| 642. |
Another bill in the 118th Congress, H.R. 4645, the Empowering Shareholders Act of 2023, would have required advisers to passively managed funds to vote in accordance with instructions from fund beneficiaries, vote in accordance with management recommendations, or abstain from voting, with certain exceptions. Empowering Shareholders Act of 2023, H.R. 4645, 118th Cong. § 2 (2023). |
| 643. |
H.R. 3402, 119th Cong. § 1 (2025). |
| 644. |
Id. |
| 645. |
Id. |
| 646. |
Protecting Retail Investors' Savings Act, H.R. 4600, 118th Cong. § 2 (2023). |
| 647. |
Protecting American's [sic] Savings Act, H.R. 4656, 118th Cong. § 2 (2023). |
| 648. |
Id. |
| 649. |
Protecting Americans' Retirement Savings from Politics Act, H.R. 4767, 118th Cong. §§ 801, 901, 1101 (2023). The bill also included a provision that would have required advisers to passively managed funds to vote in accordance with instructions from fund beneficiaries, vote in accordance with management recommendations, or abstain from voting, with certain exceptions. Id. § 1001. |
| 650. |
Sarro, supra note 178, at 378. |
| 651. |
See supra "Governance Proposals." |
| 652. |
Much of this background discussion is drawn from CRS Report R48691, Proxy Advisor Regulation: Recent Litigation, State Law Developments, and Federal Legislation, by Jay B. Sykes, which provides a more detailed overview of the history of proxy advisor regulation. |
| 653. |
Staff of ESG Working Grp., H. Comm. on Fin. Servs., 118th Cong., The Failure of ESG: An Examination of Environmental, Social, and Governance Factors in the American Boardroom and Needed Reforms 12 (2024). |
| 654. |
Id. |
| 655. |
Press Release, H. Comm. on Fin. Servs., Capital Markets Subcommittee Examines Market Influence by Proxy Advisory Firms (Apr. 29, 2025), https://financialservices.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=409711 https://perma.cc/2VC6-2KGU. |
| 656. |
Segal Marco Advisors and ProxyVote Plus also target a narrower range of clients than the other proxy advisors, focusing primarily on multiemployer pension plans. Dominic P. Keilty, Solving the Proxy Advisory Problem: Minimum Regulation for Maximum Competition, 14 Mich. Bus. & Entrepreneurial L. Rev. 67, 74 (2025). |
| 657. |
Rose, supra note 631. |
| 658. |
U.S. Gov't Accountability Off., GAO-17-47, Corporate Shareholder Meetings: Proxy Advisory Firms' Role in Voting and Corporate Governance Practices 20 (2016) [GAO Proxy Advisor Report]. |
| 659. |
Stephen Choi, Jill Fisch & Marcel Kahan, The Power of Proxy Advisors: Myth or Reality?, 59 Emory L.J. 869, 879 (2010). |
| 660. |
GAO Proxy Advisor Report, supra note 658, at 20. |
| 661. |
Choi, Fisch & Kahan, supra note 654, at 879. |
| 662. |
ISS and Glass Lewis have also emphasized that their institutional clients choose among different voting policies, including a benchmark policy, various specialized policies (e.g., policies that incorporate climate-related considerations or Catholic moral values), and custom policies tailored to particular clients. ISS has said that approximately 86% of the shares for which it processes voting instructions are tied to custom policies, while Glass Lewis claims that a "significant majority" of its institutional clients vote according to a custom policy or a custom process for reaching voting decisions. Complaint for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief ¶ 28, ISS v. Paxton, No. 1:25-cv-01160 (W.D. Tex. July 24, 2025); Complaint ¶ 41, Glass, Lewis & Co. v. Paxton, No. 25-cv-1153 (W.D. Tex. July 24, 2025). In October 2025, Glass Lewis announced that it would no longer issue benchmark voting recommendations beginning in 2027. Raquel Fox et al., Glass Lewis To End Benchmark Proxy Voting Policy: What Companies Should Know, Harv. L. Sch. F. on Corp. Gov. (Oct. 29, 2025), https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2025/10/29/glass-lewis-to-end-benchmark-proxy-voting-policy-what-companies-should-know. |
| 663. |
GAO Proxy Advisor Report, supra note 658, at 16. |
| 664. |
Sarro, supra note 178, at 402. |
| 665. |
ISS offers both corporate governance and executive compensation consulting. Governance Advisory Services, ISS, https://www.issgovernance.com/solutions/governance-advisory-services https://perma.cc/VC6G-EPDH (last visited Feb. 3, 2026); Executive Compensation, ISS, https://www.iss-corporate.com/solutions/executive-compensation https://perma.cc/ZYW8-MGSM (last visited Feb. 3, 2026). Glass Lewis offers compensation consulting. Equity Compensation Plan Advisory, Glass Lewis, https://www.glasslewis.com/corporate-solutions/equity-compensation-plan-advisory (last visited Feb. 3, 2026). |
| 666. |
E.g., Letter from Clifton A. Pemble, President & Chief Exec. Officer, Garmin Ltd., to Vanessa A. Countryman, Sec'y, SEC (Jan. 27, 2020), https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-22-19/s72219-6703085-206073.pdf. |
| 667. |
Active Stewardship Engagement Program, Glass Lewis, https://www.glasslewis.com/investor-solutions/active-stewardship-engagement (last visited Feb. 3, 2026). |
| 668. |
Cracking the Proxy Advisor Duopoly, Wall St. J. (July 12, 2023), https://www.wsj.com/opinion/proxy-advisory-firms-glass-lewis-institutional-shareholder-services-esg-investing-761e044f. |
| 669. |
Glass Lewis, Policies and Procedures for Managing and Disclosing Conflicts of Interest 8 (2024) [hereinafter Glass Lewis Conflict Policies]; ISS, Comments on Proposed Amendments to Exemptions from the Proxy Rules for Proxy Voting Advice, File No. S7-22-19, at 32 (2020) [hereinafter ISS Comment Letter], https://www.issgovernance.com/file/duediligence/31012020-ISS-Comments-Filing.pdf. |
| 670. |
Glass Lewis Conflict Policies, supra note 668, at 8; ISS Comment Letter, supra note 669, at 34–36. |
| 671. |
Kyle Isakower, Am. Council for Cap. Formation, Proxy Advisors Remain a Problem: 2024 Proxy Season Analysis Shows Companies Report—Persistent Errors in Proxy Advisors' Analyses (2025), https://accf.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/ACCF-2024-Proxy-Report_7.7.25.pdf https://perma.cc/NB86-2FWF. |
| 672. |
Edward Greene, ISS to No Longer Provide S&P 500 Companies with Draft Proxy Research Reports for Review, Georgeson (Nov. 5, 2020), https://www.georgeson.com/us/iss-to-no-longer-provide-sp-500-companies-with-draft-proxy-research-reports-for-review https://perma.cc/GK39-QJ2X. |
| 673. |
Report Feedback Statement (RFS), Glass Lewis, https://www.glasslewis.com/issuer-relations/report-feedback-statement-rfs https://perma.cc/SQ6S-GSNU (last visited Jan. 2, 2026). |
| 674. |
Letter from Kenneth A. Bertsch, Exec. Dir. & Jeffrey P. Mahoney, Gen. Counsel, Council of Institutional Investors, to Vanessa A. Countryman, Sec'y, SEC 3–4 (Feb. 4, 2020), https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-22-19/s72219-6764339-208028.pdf https://perma.cc/3R8B-N2C3. |
| 675. |
Staff of ESG Working Grp., H. Comm. on Fin. Servs., 118th Cong., The Failure of ESG: An Examination of Environmental, Social, and Governance Factors in the American Boardroom and Needed Reforms 14 (2024). |
| 676. |
Id. |
| 677. |
Missouri AG Investigates Proxy Advisors Over ESG and DEI Practices, State AG Report (July 17, 2025), https://www.stateagreport.com/news/missouri-ag-investigates-proxy-advisors-over-esg-and-dei-practices https://perma.cc/E6ZB-55F4. |
| 678. |
ISS, Proxy Voting Guidelines, Benchmark Policy Changes for 2026, at 29 (2025), https://www.issgovernance.com/file/policy/latest/updates/Americas-Policy-Updates.pdf [hereinafter ISS Benchmark Policy Changes]; Letter from Kevin Cameron, Exec. Chair, Glass, Lewis & Co., to State Att'ys Gen. Listed, at 3 (Jan. 31, 2023), https://resources.glasslewis.com/hubfs/Compliance/2023%20Letter%20to%20State%20AGs.pdf https://perma.cc/C9QD-9X2G. |
| 679. |
ISS Benchmark Policy Changes, supra note 678, at 17, 19, 20, 22. |
| 680. |
Id. |
| 681. |
15 U.S.C. § 78n(a). |
| 682. |
17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-1(l)(1)(iii). |
| 683. |
Exemptions from the Proxy Rules for Proxy Voting Advice, 85 Fed. Reg. 55082, 55088 (Sept. 3, 2020) (codified at 17 C.F.R. pt. 240). |
| 684. |
17 C.F.R. §§ 240.14a-2(b)(1), 240.14a-2(b)(3). |
| 685. |
Letter from Kevin Cameron, Exec. Chair, and Nichol Garzon-Mitchell, Senior Vice President, Gen. Counsel, Glass, Lewis & Co., to Vanessa A. Countryman, Sec'y, SEC 61–67 (Feb. 3, 2020), https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-22-19/s72219-6745349-207938.pdf https://perma.cc/M33H-RLEB; ISS Comment Letter, supra note 669, at 4–11. |
| 686. |
85 Fed. Reg. at 55091. |
| 687. |
The exemptions are important to proxy advisors because compliance with the proxy rules' information and filing requirements would allow investors to obtain proxy voting advice without paying for it. Id. at 55085. |
| 688. |
Id. at 55098, 55109. The 2020 rule also added an explanatory note to the proxy rules' anti-fraud provision, which indicated that the failure to disclose material information regarding proxy voting advice—such as a proxy advisor's methodology, sources of information, or conflicts of interest—may be considered misleading in certain circumstances Id. at 55155. |
| 689. |
ISS v. SEC, 718 F. Supp. 3d 7 (D.D.C. 2024), aff'd, 142 F.4th 757 (D.C. Cir. 2025). |
| 690. |
Id. at 12. |
| 691. |
ISS v. SEC, 142 F.4th 757 (D.C. Cir. 2025). |
| 692. |
15 U.S.C. §§ 80b-1–80b-21. |
| 693. |
ISS Comment Letter, supra note 669, at 19. |
| 694. |
Katherine Rabin, Statement of Record for SEC Roundtable on the Proxy Process, Harv. L. Sch. F. on Corp. Gov. (Nov. 21, 2018), https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2018/11/21/statement-of-record-for-sec-roundtable-on-the-proxy-process https://perma.cc/UY9N-WJNZ. |
| 695. |
Ross Kerber, Exclusive: Glass Lewis Mulls US Investment Adviser Registration, Could Ease Criticism, Reuters (Nov. 21, 2025), https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/glass-lewis-mulls-us-investment-adviser-registration-could-ease-criticism-2025-11-21 https://perma.cc/Z5XU-K74W. |
| 696. |
E.O. 14366, supra note 6. For background on the legal significance of executive orders, see CRS Report R46738, Executive Orders: An Introduction, coordinated by Abigail A. Graber. |
| 697. |
E.O. 14366, supra note 6 § 1. |
| 698. |
Id. §§ 2–4. |
| 699. |
Id. § 2(a). |
| 700. |
Id. § 2(b). |
| 701. |
Id. § 2(c)(i). |
| 702. |
Id. § 2(c)(ii). |
| 703. |
Id. § 2(c)(iii). |
| 704. |
Id. § 2(c)(iv). In a December 2025 speech, SEC Commissioner Mark Uyeda suggested that institutional investors who engage in "robovoting"—i.e., voting based on proxy advisor recommendations without independent analysis—may form a "group" within the meaning of Sections 13(d)(3) and 13(g)(3) of the Exchange Act, triggering disclosure obligations. Mark T. Uyeda, Comm'r, SEC, Remarks at the 2025 Institute for Corporate Counsel (Dec. 3, 2025), https://www.sec.gov/newsroom/speeches-statements/uyeda-remarks-institute-corporate-counsel-120325 https://perma.cc/8G6U-UYT7. For a discussion of Commissioner Uyeda's speech and the legal principles surrounding "group" formation, see Ann Lipton, 13(d) Daisy Chains, Bus. L. Prof Blog (Dec. 5, 2025), https://www.businesslawprofessors.com/2025/12/13d-daisy-chains/ https://perma.cc/8RK6-ZA88. |
| 705. |
E.O. 14366, supra note 6 § 2(c)(v). |
| 706. |
Id. § 3. |
| 707. |
Id. § 4. |
| 708. |
H.R. 4098, 119th Cong. § 2 (2025). |
| 709. |
Id. |
| 710. |
H.R. 4590, 118th Cong. § 1 (2023). |
| 711. |
H.R. 4589, 118th Cong. § 1(a) (2023). |
| 712. |
Id. |
| 713. |
Id. |
| 714. |
Id. |
| 715. |
Protecting Americans' Retirement Savings from Politics Act, H.R. 4767, 118th Cong. §§ 601, 701 (2023). |
| 716. |
Lucian Arye Bebchuk, Foreword: The Debate on Contractual Freedom in Corporate Law, 89 Colum. L. Rev. 1395 (1989). |
| 717. |
E.g., Henry N. Butler & Larry E. Ribstein, Opting Out of Fiduciary Duties: A Response to the Anti-Contractarians, 65 Wash. L. Rev. 1 (1990). |
| 718. |
E.g., Bebchuk, supra note 716, at 1399–1408 (arguing that collective action problems among shareholders, externalities, and information asymmetries may justify some limits on contractual freedom in corporate law). |
| 719. |
Brett H. McDonnell, Sticky Defaults and Altering Rules in Corporate Law, 60 SMU L. Rev. 383 (2007); Lucian A. Bebchuk & Assaf Hamdani, Optimal Defaults for Corporate Law Evolution, 96 Nw. U. L. Rev. 489 (2002). |
| 720. |
Atkins Speech, supra note 8. |