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Corporate Critic to Exit

Head of California Pension Fund Expects to Lose Vote Today

By Ben White
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, December 1, 2004; Page E01

Sean Harrigan, president of California's public employee pension fund and a major figure in the shareholder activist movement, said yesterday that he is likely to be forced from his job.

Harrigan oversees the nation's largest public pension fund, which has $177.8 billion in assets. He has used the perch to lead high-profile campaigns against what he views as excessive executive compensation and poor corporate governance practices.


Sean Harrigan of the California Public Employees' Retirement System has campaigned for corporate governance reform. (Ken James -- Bloomberg News)

_____Timeline_____
Taking on the Big Guns The California Public Employees' Retirement System has tried to use its clout to push various corporate reforms.
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He led fights against chief executives at such companies as Citigroup Inc., Walt Disney Co. and Safeway Inc. He had a major role in bringing down Dick Grasso as chairman of the New York Stock Exchange.

Along the way, Harrigan received admiring praise from shareholder groups and occasional complaints that the California Public Employees' Retirement System (Calpers) had gone too far.

Harrigan was fiercely opposed by business groups and California Republicans who said his background as an official of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union clouded his judgment as Calpers president, especially during the pension fund's campaign to oust Safeway chief executive Steven A. Burd. The campaign took place as Safeway was battling union officials over labor issues. Burd won 83 percent support from Safeway shareholders.

In a prepared statement yesterday, Harrigan acknowledged that he probably would not receive enough votes from a state panel to return to the Calpers board next year. "Corporate governance opponents are trying to silence the voice of Calpers, which has always stood for shareowners' interests against corporate greed," he said.

Rob Feckner, chairman of Calpers's investment committee, accused California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican, of succumbing to pressure from big businesses and maneuvering to have Harrigan ousted when the five-member State Personnel Board votes today on its representative to the Calpers board. Harrigan is the personnel board's representative. The Los Angeles Times reported yesterday that Harrigan was expected to lose the vote 3 to 2.

"I think there was pressure from the governor," Feckner said. "Corporate America is not happy with some of the reforms that Calpers has put forward."

A spokesman for Schwarzenegger, Vince Sollitto, called the accusations "paranoid musings" and said the governor had exerted no influence on the personnel board vote. "The representative to Calpers from the State Personnel Board is elected by the five personnel board members. This governor has appointed one of them," Sollitto said. "You do the math."

Nonetheless, California business groups and the state Republican Party have been highly critical of Harrigan. State Republican Party spokeswoman Karen Hanretty said yesterday that Harrigan's removal would be a "step in the right direction" and accused him of "favoring and actually doing the bidding" of organized labor. "At the end of business on Wednesday, Sean Harrigan will be wishing he got the same vote of confidence that Steven Burd did," she said.


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