Wall Street will play a key role at COP28, the annual summit on climate change convened by the United Nations. Chief among them is BlackRock CEO Larry Fink. He is the heavily criticized investment icon fronting the Environment, Social, and Governance (ESG) movement,...
READ MOREInsurgent Climate-Focused Exxon Directors Vote FOR Acquisition of Drilling Giant
by Paul Chesser | Oct 20, 2023 | Corporate Integrity Project, Featured News
Earlier this month Exxon Mobil Corporation announced it would acquire “drill baby drill” icon Pioneer Natural Resources, which dominates oil and gas extraction...
Why are Green Radicals Attacking Exxon & Chevron, But Not ConocoPhillips?
by NLPC Staff | May 16, 2023 | Corporate Integrity Project, Featured News
On Tuesday, National Legal and Policy Center presented a proposal at ConocoPhillips Company’s annual shareholder meeting that would require greater transparency and...
NLPC Seeks Fossil Fuel-Supporting Scientist for ExxonMobil Board
by NLPC Staff | Sep 21, 2022 | Corporate Integrity Project, Featured News
As the Securities and Exchange Commission enters the first month under a new rule that eases proxy access for shareholders’ corporate director nominations, National Legal...
NLPC Targets Oil Giant ConocoPhillips over Carbon Tax Advocacy
by NLPC Staff | May 10, 2022 | Corporate Integrity Project, Featured News
On Tuesday, National Legal and Policy Center presented a resolution at ConocoPhillips Company’s annual shareholder meeting that would require greater transparency and...
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NLPC in @WSJ: Brands Face Growing Pressure from Activist #Shareholders ... #marketing #lgbtq #investing #woke #ESG #BudLight #Mondelez #Oreo #Oreos #PFLAG @MDLZ @Oreo @wsjCMO @PatrickCoffee
NLPC in Wall St. Journal: Brands Face Growing Pressure from Activist Shareholders - National Legal...
In an article published today, the Wall Street Journal reports on increasing shareholder activism that pushes back a...
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A new wave of shareholder proposals from conservative activist groups warns top brands that they might become the next Bud Light if they don’t reconsider their work with LGBTQ groups.
These are public companies, so they have to make their case to the SEC.
Some advice for former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz: Delete your LinkedIn account! via @opinion