11/18/2025
Editorial: The Corporate Proxy Flight from ESG
Wall Street Journal (11/18/25)
The Wall Street Journal editorial board writes that when these columns first began reporting on the misuse of shareholder proxy votes for political causes, the trend looked like a juggernaut. "But only a few years later, we can declare at least a partial victory, which is good news for shareholders and corporate governance," it states. The economic analysts at Unleash Prosperity have been tracking investment votes on corporate proxy proposals for several years, and the trend keeps getting better. In 2022, when it first tracked the votes, most of the largest investment firms danced to the tune of environmental, social and governance proposals. By 2024 most of the firms had taken a notably different approach to ESG. The nearby table shows the latest Unleash Prosperity rating for 40 of the top funds. The grades measure how well the funds determine their proxy votes based on what really matters for corporate governance, which is the growth and profitability of the firm in the interests of maximum return for shareholders. ESG proposals, by contrast, focus on such progressive political priorities as gender or racial preferences, climate change, or divesting from industries that are disfavored by the political left, such as fossil fuels, plastics, or guns. These political biases can steer executives to ignore the main obligation of public companies, which is to make money for the owners, i.e., for shareholders. Unleash Prosperity examined the votes of 600 investment management companies on 50 ESG proposals in the 2024 proxy season. The proxy proposals included adopting racial or gender quotas in hiring, racial-equity audits, and especially the command to pursue net-zero goals in greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. The climate left had hoped to lock in corporate commitments on ESG that would become a political force to box in politicians. This year 11 funds received an A rating, compared to four in 2022. An A means they voted against woke proposals 90% or more of the time. BlackRock, which had a C in 2022 and was once in the vanguard of ESG voting, has vaulted to an A. This year there are 12 B grades, compared to none in 2022. Why have so many funds changed? One answer is the public exposure that these columns provided in reporting the initial proxy ratings. Some executives said in response that they didn’t even know what their proxy adviser teams were doing. The public attention drew political interest from Republican state Attorneys General, who questioned whether their state pension funds should use these investment advisers. The general political environment has also shifted with Donald Trump’s re-election. The pressure from post-George Floyd and Biden-era political intimidation on behalf of progressive causes has ebbed. As the nearby table shows, some firms are still bowing to the ESG lobby. Six firms received a D rating, including Guggenheim Funds, Franklin Templeton and Morgan Stanley. The four that received an F or F- are Victory Funds, Allspring Funds, DWS Funds, and Pimco. When these funds vote your shares, they are taking dictation from the ESG lobby, or the proxy adviser duopoly of Glass Lewis and Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS). As it happens, one half of that duopoly is also stepping back from recommending votes for woke proxy proposals. Glass Lewis’s CEO Bob Mann said in October that “It’s clear that clients in the U.S. are moving. If that’s because the politics of the space is changing, so be it.” He is reading politics in the room. The Trump Administration recently floated to the press that it is considering an executive order that would restrict the power of Glass Lewis and ISS. The two firms control about 90% of the proxy adviser market. Depending on the details, this could be welcome news for companies and shareholders. Legislation from Congress would be even better. With government having so much power these days, political fads too often capture business leaders who don’t want to risk bad publicity. ESG and DEI are two of the most recent examples, and don’t forget “stakeholder capitalism.” "Smart CEOs keep their eyes on the North Star of maximizing returns to shareholders, which is the best way to help customers, employees, and the larger society," the editorial concludes.
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