Robert A. G. Monks

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Robert Augustus Gardner Monks[1] (born December 4, 1933) is an American author, shareholder activist, corporate governance advocate, attorney, corporate director, venture capitalist and energy company executive — as well as former political candidate and Reagan administration official.[2]

Robert Monks
Born (1933-12-04) 4 December 1933 (age 90)
Political partyRepublican

Monks co-founded of Institutional Shareholder Services, Lens Investment Management, Lens Governance Advisors and The Corporate Library (now part of GMI Ratings). He authored The Emperor’s Nightmare, Corpocracy, Citizens DisUnited, Reel and Rout: A Novel, The New Global Investors and, with Nell Minow, Watching the Watchers, Corporate Governance and Power & Accountability.

He was the Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate from Maine in 1976, losing in a landslide to Democratic Senator Edmund Muskie. He again ran for Senate in 1996, but lost that Republican primary to Susan Collins. He also unsuccessfully challenged longtime Republican Senator Margaret Chase Smith in the 1972 Republican primary. In 1977, Monks was named Chair of the Maine Republican Party.[3] He resigned as party chair in 1978.[4]

Background

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Monks was born on December 4, 1933. He was the son of Rev. G. Gardner Monks and Katharine Knowles. Rev. Monks was the founding headmaster of Lenox School for Boys and Canon of the Washington Cathedral.[citation needed]

A cousin of Monks' grandmother- from whom came his second name- was the politician Augustus Gardner.[5] Monks was educated at St. Paul's School, Harvard College, Cambridge University and Harvard Law School. At Cambridge, he was a member of the winning Cambridge University Boat Club boat in the 1955 edition of The Boat Race, a traditional competition between Cambridge and Oxford Universities.[6] Monks married Millicent Carnegie Sprague in July 1954.[citation needed]

Monks' lives on an island in Maine with his wife, née Millicent Carnegie Sprague, great-granddaughter of Thomas Carnegie, the younger brother of Andrew Carnegie.[2]

Career

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"Each one of us needs to ask what we can contribute. I’ve tried to expose the illusion of corporate democracy. It’s a cost to all of us."[2]

After graduating from law school, Monks became a partner in a law firm in Boston. He was vice president of Gardner Associates and then was president and CEO of C.H. Sprague & Son, a coal and oil Company. Then he was a board member and later chairman of the Board of The Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Company and the Boston Company. Ronald Reagan appointed him as director of the United States Synthetic Fuels Corporation and as one of the founding Trustees of the Federal Employees' Retirement System. He worked for the US Department of Labor as Administrator of the Office of Pension and Welfare Benefit Programs which gave him jurisdiction over the whole U.S. pension system.

Monks has written widely about corporate governance and has published more than a hundred papers in publications around the world. He was the recipient of the Award for Outstanding Financial Executive from the Financial Management Association in 2007.

Monks is the subject of a biography chronicling the corporate governance movement, A Traitor to His Class by Hilary Rosenberg.

The corporation is an externalizing machine, in the same way that a shark is a killing machine. | Robert Monks (2003) Republican candidate for Senate from Maine and corporate governance adviser in the film The Corporation.

In the above documentary film, Monks was interviewed and featured to address issues of corporations including how their profit models historically involve being "lean, mean, externalizing machines."

Electoral History

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1972

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1972 United States Senate election in Maine Republican Primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Margaret Smith 76,964 66.746%
Republican Robert Monks 38,345 33.254%
Total votes 115,309 100%

1976

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1976 United States Senate election in Maine
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Edmund Muskie 292,704 60.203%
Republican Robert Monks 193,489 39.797%
Total votes 486,193 100%

1996

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1996 United States Senate election in Maine Republican Primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Susan Collins 53,339 55.519%
Republican W. John Hathaway 29,792 31.009%
Republican Robert Monks 12,943 13.472%
Total votes 96,074 100%

Bibliography

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  • Power & Accountability. HarperCollins, 1991. (with Nell Minow)
  • Watching the Watchers. Capstone, 1996. (with Nell Minow)
  • The Emperor's Nightingale. Saint Simons Island, Georgia: Brook Street, 1999.
  • The New Global Investors. Capstone, 2001.
  • Capitalism Without Owners Will Fail: A Policymaker's Guide to Reform. London: CSFI, 2002. (with Allen Sykes)
  • Reel and Rout. Saint Simons Island, Georgia: Brook Street, 2004.
  • Corpocracy. New York; Wiley, 2007.
  • Corporate Valuation for Portfolio Investment. London: Wiley, 2010. (with Alexandra Lajoux)
  • Corporate Governance (5th Revised Edition). London: Wiley, 2011. (with Nell Minow)
  • Citizens DisUnited: Passive Investors, Drone CEOs, and the Corporate Capture of the American Dream. 2013.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ A Traitor to his Class: Robert A. G. Monks and the battle to change corporate America, Hilary Rosenberg, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1999, pg 2
  2. ^ a b c Anna Bernasek (July 6, 2013). "Robert A.G. Monks, Crusading Against Corporate Excess". The New York Times.
  3. ^ https://riponsociety.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/1977-09_Vol-XIII_No-17.pdf
  4. ^ https://www.newspapers.com/image/664492995/
  5. ^ A Traitor to his Class: Robert A. G. Monks and the battle to change corporate America, Hilary Rosenberg, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1999, pg 3
  6. ^ Time - Sport: Scoreboard, Apr. 4, 1955
  • Hart, Joanne. "Bob Monks: Ungoverned companies are like doped horses." (Reach April 2005)
  • Geraciot, David A. "Bob Monks' Thirty-year Crusade." (Registered Rep. February 2003)
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Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for U.S. Senator from Maine
(Class 1)

1976
Succeeded by
Preceded by
John R. Linnell
Chairman of the Maine Republican Party
1977–1978
Succeeded by
Hattie M. Bickmore