CA Inc. investors delivered a sharp rebuke to
Alfonse D'Amato yesterday, as an unusually high percentage of them
withheld their support for the former New York senator's reelection as a
director at the tainted technology company. Of the shares voted, about 26
percent checked the "Withhold" box for D'Amato - up from just over 8
percent last year, when some Wall Street watchdogs started calling for his
ouster.Any withhold tally that
reaches even the low double-digits is considered a sign of serious
investor displeasure, corporate governance pros said.
Critics want D'Amato to go because he's the
last remaining director who served on the board of CA, formerly known as
Computer Associates, when it became ensnared in a $2.2 billion accounting
scandal that began in 2000.
Calls for D'Amato to step down escalated
this year following revelations that, in 2000, he helped broker a deal for
then- Computer Associates President Sanjay Kumar and founder Charles Wang
to buy the New York Islanders hockey team, which one proxy-advisory firm
said appears to be a clear conflict of interest.
D'Amato defended his tenure when quizzed by
reporters following yesterday's shareholder meeting at Manhattan's
Roosevelt Hotel.
"I think we've come a long way . . . in
moving the company in the right direction," he said.
He noted that he and CA Chairman Lewis
Ranieri have brought in new directors and top management to try to turn
around the beleaguered company.