In Citizens United, the Supreme Court relaxed the ability of corporations to spend money on elections, rejecting a shareholder-protection rationale for restrictions on spending. Little research has focused on the relationship between corporate governance – shareholder rights and power – and corporate political activity. This paper explores that relationship in the S&P 500 to predict the effect of Citizens United on shareholder wealth. The paper finds that in the period 1998-2004 shareholder-friendly governance was consistently and strongly negatively related to observable political activity before and after controlling for established correlates of that activity, even in a firm fixed effects model. Political activity, in turn, is strongly n...
Does corporate political giving actually affect shareholder wealth? While firms value political part...
Perceived corporate dominance has spurred a recent populist backlash, on both the political left and...
Corporate political activity raises an important and diffcult question of corporate law: who decides...
The US Supreme Court case Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission significantly altered the r...
In this paper, we study shareholder views on corporate political contributions. We find that, with s...
Contrary to prior assumptions, the right to corporate political speech established by Citizens Unite...
As the Supreme Court reconsiders prior decisions upholding limits on corporate electioneering from g...
The 2010 midterm elections following the Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Citizens United v. FEC...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
Since the Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision, which allowed corporations to make campaign...
As a result of the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Citizens United, corporations and individuals now ...
This chapter explores answers to the policy problems created by Citizens United, focusing on the pos...
As a result of the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Citizens United, corporations and individuals now ...
The 2010 midterm elections following the Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Citizens United v. FEC...
This article reveals the positions of corporations not only as active players in politics but also a...
Does corporate political giving actually affect shareholder wealth? While firms value political part...
Perceived corporate dominance has spurred a recent populist backlash, on both the political left and...
Corporate political activity raises an important and diffcult question of corporate law: who decides...
The US Supreme Court case Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission significantly altered the r...
In this paper, we study shareholder views on corporate political contributions. We find that, with s...
Contrary to prior assumptions, the right to corporate political speech established by Citizens Unite...
As the Supreme Court reconsiders prior decisions upholding limits on corporate electioneering from g...
The 2010 midterm elections following the Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Citizens United v. FEC...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
Since the Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision, which allowed corporations to make campaign...
As a result of the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Citizens United, corporations and individuals now ...
This chapter explores answers to the policy problems created by Citizens United, focusing on the pos...
As a result of the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Citizens United, corporations and individuals now ...
The 2010 midterm elections following the Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Citizens United v. FEC...
This article reveals the positions of corporations not only as active players in politics but also a...
Does corporate political giving actually affect shareholder wealth? While firms value political part...
Perceived corporate dominance has spurred a recent populist backlash, on both the political left and...
Corporate political activity raises an important and diffcult question of corporate law: who decides...