The Wall Street Journal - 26.11.2019

(Ann) #1

A14| Tuesday, November 26, 2019 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.


Proxy Advisers Should Serve the Stockholders


Carl Icahn is an activist investor
with a penchant for confronting in-
competent, misguided or complacent
corporate management, but he is
wrong to oppose the Securities and
Exchange Commission’s proposed
new rules for proxy advisory firms
(“Let Proxy Advisers Do Their Work,”
op-ed, Nov. 19).
Investment managers are fiducia-
ries and therefore can be held liable
for decisions that aren’t prudent or
not in the best interests of their cli-
ents. Importantly, their clients are
owners of stock (including shares
held in mutual funds), not other
stakeholders. A clear legal obligation
to first represent the interests of
stockholders would help keep the
proxy advisory firms’ focus where it
belongs. Proxy advisers can still do
their work, but they’ll need to do it
better.
PAULBRYAN
Tarpon Springs, Fla.

Regarding your editorial “The
Proxy Protection Racket” (Nov. 11):
The duopoly of Institutional Share-
holder Services (ISS) and Glass Lewis,
two proxy advisory firms that control
97% of the market, is a desirable one
for social activists who normally de-
cry such concentration of market
power. Public- and private-union pen-
sion plans and investors buying or
selling products with environmental,
social and governance (ESG) goals are
happy with the proxy advisory status
quo and don’t want their silent part-
ners (ISS and Glass Lewis) subject to

the proposed SEC regulations.
ISS and Glass Lewis have a pretty
sweet gig using their proxy advisory
power to nudge companies toward so-
cially conscious policies and at the
same time selling research reports
that provide support for ESG invest-
ment products to the firms and funds
that are their proxy advisory clients.
For many years, the proxy duopoly
operated under the radar, but influ-
ence has skyrocketed as ESG invest-
ing has taken off and index funds
gained in popularity. The goal in in-
dex-fund management is to cut ex-
penses to the bone to attract more
assets. More often than not, large in-
dex-fund managers vote proxies with
the crowd, and the crowd is guided
by ISS and Glass Lewis.
Under current SEC regulations, it
is a free lunch for proxy advisory
firms to tilt recommendations of sup-
port toward proposals favored by so-
cial activists and unions. It also is a
free lunch for ESG investment firms
to use proxy advisory firms as a buf-
fer on contentious votes. With assets
pouring into index funds, where proxy
voting is more of an administrative
nuisance than an opportunity for sub-
stantial value added versus peers (a
reality that no fund manager would
ever admit), giving proxy advisory
firms a free pass on legal liability
along with an outsize influence over
governance matters could be costly to
shareholders and, over the long term,
detrimental to capital allocation.
JOHNGREER
Jacksonville, Fla.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR


Letters intended for publication should
be addressed to: The Editor, 1211 Avenue
of the Americas, New York, NY 10036,
or emailed to [email protected]. Please
include your city and state. All letters
are subject to editing, and unpublished
letters can be neither acknowledged nor
returned.

“I cancelled the cable, turned off the
phone, shut down the internet...
where am I?”

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

It Isn’t Racist to Honor the Military’s Dead


Regarding Elliot Kaufman’s “Politi-
cal Correctness Claims a Tough Guy”
(op-ed, Nov. 13): The firing of Cana-
dian hockey commentator Don Cherry
for his “discriminatory” and “offen-
sive” comments is a another example
of what’s wrong with our Western so-
ciety. Patriotism no longer counts. He
was suggesting immigrants should
respect and honor the men and
women who serve and those who
died for the country in which they
now live. Don’t so many people immi-
grate to have this freedom? Suggest-
ing they buy and wear poppies is in-
nocent and shows honor to the
veterans who sacrificed for the free-
dom today’s immigrants enjoy.
Anyone who knows or ever worked
with Mr. Cherry knows how much he
loves the men and women in uniform,
veterans and those who died in the Ca-
nadian and the U.S. military. For years
any time a Canadian died in service, he
would take the last 30 seconds of his
hugely popular Coach’s Corner and
honor them and their family in what
was always a moving and emotional

tribute. Love of one’s freedom is an-
other casualty in identity politics.
JOHNBONEMA
Bloomfield Hills, Mich.

I would say that all those dancing on
Mr. Cherry’s grave are more invested in
getting rid of an old guy who doesn’t
follow their trends than in easing some
hypothetical immigrant’s hurt feelings.
NANCYBARNARD
Golden, Colo.

Look Out Below for Falling School Standards


Regarding C.J. Szafir and Cori Pe-
tersen’s “Beware Warren’s ‘Madiso-
nian’ Plan for Public Education”
(Cross Country, Nov. 16): Sen. Eliza-
beth Warren’s plan for K-12 educa-
tion, if she wins the White House, is
to “increase federal funding for public
schools by $800 billion...strengthen
teachers unions, and halt the growth
of public charter schools.” Madison’s
spending per student is the highest
relative to comparably sized districts
in Wisconsin, but the city has one of
the worst black-white achievement
gaps in the state and perhaps the
country. Black students in Madison
also are far more likely than whites to
attend dangerous schools.
The test scores that reveal Madi-
son’s poor results and racial achieve-
ment gap come from the National As-
sessment of Educational Progress, a
congressionally mandated program.
The NAEP was created in the 1960s

when a Democrat was president and
Democrats controlled Congress. If
Sen. Warren is the next president and
Democrats win the House and Senate,
NAEP’s mission, practices and stan-
dards could be updated to align with
21st-century progressivism. Standard-
ized tests that are unwelcome in col-
lege admissions could be deemed un-
acceptable measures of K-12 perfor-
mance. Discard or discredit test
scores and, voilà, no racial achieve-
ment gap and no problem for Sen.
Warren’s bringing the Madison model
to the nation. Students unmeasured in
K-12 and unmeasured in college ad-
missions finally will have a level play-
ing field, regardless of how poor their
education, and teachers unions will
realize an obscene return on their in-
vestment in their Democratic patron
saints.
ANDERSSMITH
Durham, N.C.

For Millennia, Philosophy
Underperformed Physics
Nicholas Stang’s review of A.C.
Grayling’s “The History of Philoso-
phy” (Books, Nov. 16) is one more
example of navel gazing, orompha-
loskepsis, by a philosopher. A history
of philosophy records the ideas of
Thales, Socrates, Hegel and others,
but so does a textbook of philoso-
phy. In contrast, a textbook of phys-
ics is different from a history of
physics because physics has ad-
vanced from Aristotle to Galileo to
Newton to Einstein and on. Current
knowledge in physics is quite differ-
ent from previous knowledge. But a
textbook of philosophy is written as
a history of philosophy because
knowledge in philosophy hasn’t pro-
gressed: The original questions ha-
ven’t been answered.
ANTHONYWOODWARD
Portland, Ore.

Pepper ...
And Salt

Hurting People You Help,
But for Their Own Good
While I agree with Fred Hatfield
(“Sanders’s Tax Would Hit Small In-
vestors,” op-ed, Nov. 18) about the
negatives of Bernie Sanders’s finan-
cial transaction tax, why stop there
with the critique of Democratic Party
economic proposals? Concerns that
Democratic proposals would impair
economic growth and hurt the middle
class surely must apply to other ele-
ments of the emerging Democratic
wish list as well, including the Green
New Deal, Medicare for All, etc. In my
view, virtually the entire menu of
Democratic economic proposals is an-
tigrowth, and the financial transac-
tion tax seems to be relatively small
potatoes compared with some of the
other ideas being discussed.
DANAR.HERMANSON
Marietta, Ga.

Trump and the SEALs


P


resident Trump has done much to lift
military morale with his rhetorical and
financial support after the Obama years
of indifference. So it’s trou-
bling to see the Commander in
Chief get crosswise with the
officer corps over what the
military calls “good order and
discipline.”
That tension has come to a
head in the case of Chief Petty Officer Edward
Gallagher. He’s the Navy SEAL who was court-
martialed but acquitted of all charges except for
posing for a photograph with a dead enemy cap-
tive. Mr. Trump intervened to restore his rank,
but SEAL commanders and senior civilians and
military officers in the chain of command
wanted to empanel a review board to consider
his continuing as a SEAL.
Mr. Trump intervened again to ensure that
Chief Gallagher wouldn’t lose his trident as a
SEAL. Navy Secretary Richard Spencer dis-
agreed with the President, and Mr. Spencer was
dismissed on the weekend by Defense Secretary
Mark Esper for going to the White House to ne-
gotiate a compromise without Mr. Esper’s
knowledge. Mr. Spencer says he resigned as a
matter of principle.
It’s hard to sort the truth from fiction given
the tendentious media coverage, but we’ll give
it a try. Mr. Trump has the clear authority to act
as he did, and he isn’t the first Commander in
Chief to intervene in military discipline. Jimmy
Carter pardoned thousands who dodged the
draft in the Vietnam War. Mr. Esper was also
right, even obliged, to fire Mr. Spencer if the
Navy Secretary went behind his back.
The question is whether Mr. Trump was wise
to intervene and what unintentional damage he
might be doing to discipline in the war-fighting
ranks. Chief Gallagher seems to have been
brought to Mr. Trump’s attention after he be-
came a cause célèbre on TV. “We train our boys
to be killing machines, then prosecute them
when they kill!,” Mr. Trump put it in an October
12 tweet.
This is wrong. The military doesn’t train
young men and women to be killing machines.
The services train them to be soldiers with
judgment who will kill when needed but within
the laws of war. Mr. Trump has loosened the
rules of military engagement in some theaters,
which has made sense. But that doesn’t mean
killing unarmed combatants and civilians or
abusing captives. This is a key difference be-


tween American soldiers and the unlawful en-
emy combatants in Islamic State.
The military’s disciplinary process is also
multilayered and fair. Typi-
cally allegations arise from a
soldier’s fellow troops,
which is what happened in
the case of Chief Gallagher.
The facts are then reviewed
by the immediate command-
ing officer, who may recommend review by
officers independent of the immediate chain
of command.
Those officers may then make a recommen-
dation to a senior admiral or general, who will
decide whether to call for a court-martial. The
jury typically includes combat veterans who can
examine the facts with first-hand experience of
the pressures of battle. If the accused is found
guilty, the punishment may also take into ac-
count his previous service record and other mit-
igating circumstances. As former Army General
Jack Keane puts it, if you have to be accused of
something, better in the military justice system
than in civilian courts.
In Chief Gallagher’s case, the first prosecutor
seems to have been biased and the presiding
judge dismissed him. He was also detained with
some hard military prisoners until Mr. Trump
intervened to have him moved. In the end the
Chief received a fair military trial.
iii
The concern among senior naval officers is
that Chief Gallagher’s behavior is symptomatic
of a larger cultural problem of ill-discipline that
they say has developed in some SEAL units.
This includes episodes of substance abuse, sex-
ual harassment or assault, mistreating detain-
ees and generally bending the rules.
Our sources say military leaders want to
clean this up, and they are worried about a mes-
sage of tolerance for misbehavior that Mr.
Trump’s intervention into Chief Gallagher’s
case might send. This is the reason those offi-
cers, backed by Mr. Esper and Secretary Spen-
cer, wanted a review board to consider Chief
Gallagher’s standing as a SEAL.
A generation of officers had to rebuild the
war-fighting culture after Vietnam, which they
did with great success, and the military is a rare
institution that Americans say they still trust.
As Commander in Chief, Mr. Trump will under-
mine the officers under his command if he runs
roughshod over their effort to maintain good
order and discipline.

Senior officers worry


about tolerance for a


culture of ill-discipline.


Thanksgiving at the Supreme Court


T


he Supreme Court didn’t issue a land-
mark decision Monday, but it did shoot
off a couple of flares. Notably, the
Court rebuked the Ninth Cir-
cuit Court of Appeals for
again flouting its precedents
while Justice Brett Ka-
vanaugh put a stake down on
the Constitution’s non-dele-
gation doctrine.
The Court unanimously vacated a Ninth Cir-
cuit decision inThompson v. Hebdonthat up-
held Alaska’s $500 annual limit for individual
contributions to political candidates and groups.
Lower court judges had willfully ignored the
High Court’sRandall(2006) decision invalidat-
ing similar contribution limits in Vermont.
As Justice Stephen Breyer wrote in the
Randallplurality opinion, “contribution limits
that are too low can...harm the electoral
process by preventing challengers from
mounting effective campaigns against incum-
bent officeholders, thereby reducing demo-
cratic accountability.”
The High Court is policing its precedents, but
the folly of contribution limits has been under-
scored by the Democratic presidential race as
non-rich candidates spend half their time
pleading with small donors. Meantime, Michael
Bloomberg can spend hundreds of millions of
dollars of his personal wealth.
Eugene McCarthy mounted a competitive
campaign in 1968 backed by antiwar million-
aires. Perhaps lesser-known Democrats like
John Hickenlooper or Amy Klobuchar could
have gained more traction if they could raise


unlimited funds from wealthy supporters.
On Monday the Court also declined to reliti-
gate its 5-3Gundydecision last term (Justice Ka-
vanaugh wasn’t yet seated) by
declining to hearPaul v. U.S.
Both cases challenged the Sex
Offender Registration and No-
tification Act’s delegation of
authority to the Attorney Gen-
eral. Justice Samuel Alito, a
hawk on criminal enforcement, joined the four
liberals in the majority.
Readers may recall Justice Neil Gorsuch’s ex-
cellent dissent explaining why it is unconstitu-
tional for Congress to delegate power to other
branches to decide major political and economic
questions. “If a majority of this Court were will-
ing to reconsider the approach we have taken for
the past 84 years,” Justice Alito noted in his con-
currence, “I would support that effort.”
The news Monday is that Justice Kavanaugh
wrote separately in thePauldenial of certiorari
to announce his support for considering an-
other non-delegation challenge. “Justice Gor-
such’s scholarly analysis of the Constitution’s
nondelegation doctrine in hisGundydissent
may warrant further consideration in future
cases,” Justice Kavanaugh declared.
So there are now five Justices for reviewing
broad Congressional delegations to administra-
tive agencies. And there are no shortage of po-
tential challenges—for instance, the EPA’s au-
thority to establish fuel-economy mandates. Or
how about the Financial Stability Oversight
Council’s power to say what is a too-big-to-fail
institution? This could be fun.

Two notable opinions


on speech and the non-


delegation doctrine.


Bloomberg No News


M


ike Bloomberg joined the Democratic
race for President on Sunday, creating
a conundrum for his journalists at
Bloomberg LP. Do they quit
covering 2020? Do they stand
on the principle of editorial in-
dependence, while promising
to treat their billionaire pro-
prietor like any other Joe, Pete
or Elizabeth?
Neither, per a memo Sunday from John Mick-
lethwait, Bloomberg’s editor in chief. “We will
write about virtually all aspects of this presi-
dential contest,” he said, adding that a
Bloomberg reporter has already been assigned
to Mr. Bloomberg’s campaign. But “we will con-
tinue our tradition of not investigating Mike
(and his family and foundation) and we will ex-
tend the same policy to his rivals in the Demo-
cratic primaries.”
That same courtesy won’t be given to Presi-
dent Trump, at least for now. Bloomberg’s re-
porters will “continue to investigate the Trump
administration, as the government of the day.”
This question will be reassessed, the memo said,
if Mr. Bloomberg eventually wins the Democratic
Party’s nomination.


What an awkward kludge. Start with the ban
on investigating Democrats, but not Mr. Trump.
There’s a name for folks who dig through only one
political party’s trash: opposi-
tion researchers. Bloomberg LP
has about 2,700 journalists and
analysts, according to the Jour-
nal’s news story.
Now Bloomberg is telling
readers that its investigative
reporters will sit on their hands for 2020 Demo-
crats: No digging into Joe Biden’s conflict of in-
terest in Ukraine, or Elizabeth Warren’s bio-
graphical fibs, or Pete Buttigieg’s record as
mayor of South Bend.
Yet the GOP President, Mr. Micklethwait said,
is fair game for muckraking. So if an anonymous
source mails Bloomberg a copy of Mr. Trump’s
tax returns, they’ll happily write that up? Rather
than debate “what ifs,” the memo suggests let-
ting Bloomberg’s coverage “speak for itself.”
It hardly matters that Mr. Bloomberg may not
win the Democratic nomination. His campaign is
premised on the idea that, as his launch video
says, Mr. Trump is a “menace.” If Bloomberg can’t
pledge to cover both parties equally, it would be
better not to cover the election at all.

His reporters won’t
investigate Democrats—

but Trump is fair game.


REVIEW & OUTLOOK


OPINION

Free download pdf