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You know Your Survival Guy loves dividends and values his fiduciary duty to clients. But Richard Vanderford writes in The Wall Street Journal that this year companies will be voting on issues like “abortion, guns and climate change.” What does any of that have to do with your dividend? Vanderford continues:

A backlash against companies taking on issues ranging from climate change to abortion rights is helping to push shareholder proposals to record numbers this year.

More advocacy groups are using theseย resolutionsย to try to inject their voices into the corporate agenda, questioning companiesโ€™ adoption of policies that some view as being overly political. One group, for example, put forward a resolution requesting thatย Eli Lillyย report on the risks of supporting abortion. Last year, the drugmaker expressed its opposition to Indianaโ€™s near-comprehensive abortion ban.

Such proposals questioning companiesโ€™ stances on social and environmental issues have come in record numbers, surging to 74 for annual meetings held before May 31, up from 43 last year, according to data from ISS Corporate Solutions, a unit of proxy-advisory firm ISS.

โ€œThe incredible dissension in the political arena is spilling over into the capital markets,โ€ saidย Heidi Welsh, executive director of the Sustainable Investments Institute, a U.S.-based nonprofit that says it provides nonpartisan analysis of sustainability issues. โ€œCompanies are getting dragged into partisan fights that they donโ€™t want to be in, but they canโ€™t avoid it anymore.โ€

Companies are facing proposals from both sides of the political spectrum, dragging them into the increasingly fractious conversations over environmental, social and governance issues. In total, 682 shareholder proposals were filed for annual meetings being held through May 31, according to ISS Corporate Solutions.

โ€œThis is becoming a focal point of our society as a whole,โ€ saidย Jun Frank, an ISS Corporate Solutions managing director and lead author of a paper on the topic scheduled to be published this week.

As Republican politicians including Florida Gov.ย Ron DeSantisย continue to push back on ESG, conservative-leaning shareholders have put forward proposals questioning, for example, the prudence of corporate diversity policies and the feasibility of decarbonization. Businesses should focus on the bottom line, they say.

โ€œCompanies are abandoning their fiduciary duties to shareholders to adopt the hard left position,โ€ saidย Scott Shepard, a fellow at the National Center for Public Policy Research, a Washington-based conservative think tank that has put forward a number of anti-ESG proposals. โ€œWeโ€™re just trying to get them back to sanity and neutrality.โ€

Action Line: “Abandoning their fiduciary duty?” Your Survival Guy doesn’t like the sound of that. Either you’re a fiduciary, or you’re not. Companies and asset managers owe it to shareholders and clients to put their interests first. When you’re ready to talk to someone who puts your interests first, I’m here.

Originally posted on Your Survival Guy.ย