Dan Carroll is the Vice President for Programs and Counsel, David Pahlic is the Director for Programs, and Bruce Freed is the President at Center for Political Accountability. This post is based on their CPA memorandum.
The 2024 CPA-Zicklin Index is published shortly before Election Day and at an unparalleled time in the nation’s political history. The Index’s data reflect leading companies holding firm overall to established norms of political disclosure and accountability, despite fierce headwinds against environmental, social, and governance (ESG) and related principles for investors and U.S. corporations.
Moreover, when the 2024 Index results are compared against the last presidential election years of 2020 and 2016, the picture is striking: Many large public companies have realized major gains in disclosure and accountability for their election-related spending from corporate funds, and the gains are permanent. Whether examining the overall number of S&P 500 companies in 2024 or the 331 companies that have been a constant in the Index since 2015, the Trump years (2017 to 2021) plus Biden years (2021 to the present) have seen solid and dramatic increases in corporate political disclosure and accountability.