Corporate Political Spending & Shareholders’ Rights: Why the U.S. Should Adopt the British Approach

Ciara Torres-Spelliscy
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

American shareholders lack the ability to consent to political spending by corporations. Indeed, because of gaps between corporate and campaign finance law, U.S. corporations can make political expenditures without giving shareholders any notice of the spending either before or after the fact. This is problematic because the political interests of the managers who spend the corporate money may diverge from the political interests of shareholders who provided the funding. By contrast, British companies must seek permission from shareholders to make political expenditures under the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act of 2000 and must report such spending to U.K. shareholders on an annual basis. Shareholders in U.S. companies have been protected by a century’s worth of election laws which limited the amount of money that could be spent in federal elections by corporations, unions and banks. Corporations are required to pay for federal political expenditures through corporate political action committees (PAC's). This PAC requirement was struck in Citizens United, a Supreme Court decision dated January 21, 2010. The federal corporate PAC requirement safeguarded the interests of shareholders in particular because most investors are unaware of how, when or why corporations make political expenditures. For example, in states that lack federal-style election rules, corporations may give political donations directly from their corporate treasuries (money in the corporate treasury includes funds from the sale of stocks and products). Corporations can spend money on politics without consent from or notice to shareholders. The shareholder may not know who the corporation supports or may even actively disagree with who the corporation supports. By contrast, if a shareholder chooses to give to a corporate PAC, then the shareholder is fully on notice that the money will be used for a political purpose and there is meaningful consent in the transaction. The laws that require corporations to pay for political expenditures through corporate PAC's are under legal attack in the courts. Most recently, the Supreme Court overruled Austin v. Michigan Chamber of Commerce and part of McConnell v. Federal Election Commission-two cases which required corporations to conduct political spending through corporate PAC's. The Supreme Court used Citizens United as an opportunity to expand corporate speech rights. This new development in the law has hurt shareholders by allowing corporate managers to use corporate treasury funds to make political expenditures. A recent study, “Corporate Political Contributions: Investment or Agency?” by Aggarwal, Meschke, and Wang (2009) found that large corporate political expenditures are linked with lower shareholder value and poor corporate management. In other words, managers make political donations because they want to, not because giving will necessarily benefit the corporations they manage. Overruling Austin and part of McConnell will give poor managers even more venues in which to spend shareholders’ investments on political expenses. By exploring both campaign finance law and corporate law, this paper, “Political Spending & Shareholders’ Rights,” will argue that the U.S. should adopt the British approach to corporate political expenditures. In the first instance, U.S. corporations should disclose their political spending directly to shareholders and they should give shareholders the opportunity to consent to political spending. These reforms will improve corporate governance and minimize corporate risk. The need for this reform has become heightened with the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision. In a world where corporations can spend an unlimited amount corporate treasury funds on federal and state elections, shareholders will need new protections to guard against self-interested political spending by corporate managers.
企业政治支出与股东权利:为什么美国应该采取英国的做法
美国股东缺乏同意公司政治支出的能力。事实上,由于公司法和竞选财务法之间的差距,美国公司可以在事前或事后不向股东发出任何通知的情况下进行政治支出。这是有问题的,因为花费公司资金的管理人员的政治利益可能与提供资金的股东的政治利益不同。相比之下,根据2000年的《政党、选举和公投法》(political Parties, Elections and referendum Act),英国公司在进行政治支出时必须获得股东的许可,并且必须每年向英国股东报告此类支出。一个世纪以来,美国公司的股东一直受到选举法的保护,这些选举法限制了公司、工会和银行在联邦选举中的支出金额。公司必须通过公司政治行动委员会(PAC)支付联邦政治支出。最高法院于2010年1月21日对“联合公民”(Citizens United)案作出裁决,推翻了政治行动委员会的这一要求。联邦公司政治行动委员会的要求特别保护了股东的利益,因为大多数投资者不知道公司如何、何时或为什么进行政治支出。例如,在没有联邦式选举规则的州,公司可以直接从公司资金库里提供政治捐款(公司资金库里的钱包括出售股票和产品的资金)。公司可以在不征得股东同意或不通知股东的情况下把钱花在政治上。股东可能不知道公司支持谁,甚至可能积极反对公司支持谁。相比之下,如果股东选择向公司政治行动委员会捐款,那么股东就完全知道这笔钱将用于政治目的,并且在交易中得到了有意义的同意。要求公司通过公司政治行动委员会支付政治开支的法律在法庭上受到法律攻击。最近,最高法院驳回了奥斯汀诉密歇根商会案和麦康奈尔诉联邦选举委员会案的一部分,这两起案件要求公司通过公司政治行动委员会进行政治支出。最高法院以“联合公民”案为契机,扩大了企业的言论权利。这项法律的新进展允许公司经理使用公司财政资金进行政治支出,损害了股东的利益。最近的一项研究《企业政治献金:投资还是代理?》Aggarwal, Meschke, and Wang(2009)发现,大的企业政治支出与较低的股东价值和较差的企业管理有关。换句话说,管理者进行政治捐赠是因为他们想要这样做,而不是因为捐赠一定会使他们管理的公司受益。推翻奥斯汀案和麦康奈尔案的部分判决,将给糟糕的管理者更多的场所,让他们把股东的投资用于政治开支。通过对竞选财务法和公司法的探讨,本文“政治支出与股东权利”将论证美国应该采用英国的企业政治支出方法。首先,美国企业应直接向股东披露其政治支出,并给予股东同意政治支出的机会。这些改革将改善公司治理,最大限度地降低公司风险。随着最高法院对“联合公民”一案的裁决,这项改革的必要性变得更加强烈。在一个企业可以在联邦和州选举中无限制地动用公司国库资金的世界里,股东们将需要新的保护措施,以防止企业管理者进行自利的政治支出。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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