Comcast CEO Brian Roberts is safe as the chairman of the board and Comcast, one of the nation’s biggest corporate lobbyists in Washington, doesn’t have to disclose more information about its grassroots lobbying, according to inquirer.com.
Comcast held its annual shareholder meeting online on Wednesday where the votes on these shareholder proposals were taken, though the exact shareholder vote tallies won’t be released until next week.
One of the activist Comcast proposals voted down on Wednesday called for an independent chairman of the board. Comcast and Roberts opposed it.
Brian Roberts |
“In the past we have seen significant amounts of outside shareholders vote for our proposals," Kate Monahan, shareholder engagement manager at Friends Fiduciary, said on Wednesday. "Comcast is part of a highly regulated consumer-facing industry so when their lobbying does not align with their public statements they risk damage to their reputation which can affect the bottom line.”
Comcast was the 14th-largest federal lobbying spender for 2017, doling out $15.3 million, Friends Fiduciary said in its statement to shareholders, basing the ranking on the non-profit Opensecrets.org.
Comcast also belongs to the NCTA—The Internet & Television Association, which spent $132.8 million on lobbying between 2010 and 2017.
Comcast discloses trade association payments used for political contributions, but not payments used for lobbying, the Friends Fiduciary said in the statement to shareholders, adding that “trade associations generally spend far more on lobbying than political contributions.”
Comcast shareholders approved executive compensation levels, an advisory vote that’s not binding.
Comcast shareholders also approved the ten existing board members to one-year terms and approved Deloitte & Touche LLP as independent auditors for 2019. Comcast spent $24 million on auditors on 2018.
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