WCCG’s Director to Speak at NACD Panel
June 3, 2025 at 2:00 pm ET
Director Lawrence Cunningham will serve on a panel entitled “How Business Governance is Changing and Why It Matters.”
Session Description: Business governance is evolving in response to legislative changes and market demands, particularly in states like Delaware and Texas.
This session will examine key updates to governance frameworks, focusing on how these changes impact compliance, risk management, and strategic decision-making. Attendees will gain critical insights into the shifting governance landscape and what these developments mean for board directors.
More information on this event is available on the NACD’s website.
Q & A Segment
An Evolving Landscape: What’s at Stake in the Incorporation Debate?
For more than a century, Delaware has been the leading jurisdiction for corporate America. While it remains the dominant choice, recent moves by a few high-profile companies—such as Tesla, Dropbox, and The Trade Desk—to reincorporate in states like Texas or Nevada have drawn attention to the broader landscape of incorporation options.
Though the number of companies making such moves remains small, the visibility and market capitalization of these firms have sparked renewed interest in how companies evaluate their incorporation decisions. These choices often reflect strategic considerations around risk management, governance preferences, and long-term identity.
Beyond the corporate implications, incorporation also affects state-level revenues and legal ecosystems. For smaller states like Delaware, where franchise fees contribute meaningfully to the budget, even modest shifts can have noticeable effects.
The following are highlights of the Q&A between Jane Sadowsky of the NACD and Lawrence Cunningham, Director of the Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at University of Delaware
1. What advantages does your state offer public companies today?
Delaware offers a unique mix of many advantages. It’s the gold standard for incorporation, trusted by companies of all sizes.
Delaware courts have the most experienced and non-partisan corporate law judges in the world.
The legal community is highly sophisticated.
The executive and legislative branches understand how important corporate law is to the state and are extremely capable and responsive. The Secretary of State’s office is the envy of all other states.
The whole state works to strike the right balance—between shareholders and directors, and between large and small investors.
In Delaware, boards of directors are important actors in corporate governance, not rubber stamps. Not dummies who simply do what management wants, whether that’s good for shareholders or not.
It’s the traditional model—aligned with the NACD’s views of corporate governance.
The data reflects the continued confidence companies place in Delaware, which for a long time and today is home to:
- 70% of Fortune 500 companies
- 80% of U.S. IPOs, and
- 90% of start-ups.
We like to say, “in Delaware, you’re in good company.”
2. How does the Delaware judicial system contribute to the state’s leadership in corporate chartering?
Delaware courts are highly focused. In the Chancery Court, just seven judicial officers handle a huge number of corporate cases, and they’ve done it for decades. With 2.2 million companies organized there, Delaware sees all the disputes, including the most complex and high-stakes ones.
Some say Delaware can be unpredictable, but that misses the point. In any system handling that volume, there will be tough decisions. That’s not unpredictability—it’s the nature of nuance. In fact, Delaware’s deep case law makes outcomes much more reliable and explains why courts all over the world follow Delaware.
At the appellate level, Delaware has another edge. Its Supreme Court is just as focused and fluent in corporate law as its trial court—and Justices are appointed to long terms and appointments are required to have partisan balance which keeps politics out.
3. Is judicial experience or ideological alignment more important for today’s boards and executives?
Ideological alignment doesn’t play a role in Delaware corporate law. You won’t find it in Delaware’s statutes or cases. They talk about the internal workings of corporations, not political debates.
Delaware’s constitutional framework requires political balance on its courts. That keeps corporate rulings focused on law, not ideology.
What matters is judicial fluency in corporate life. Boards, managers and owners need judges who understand transaction details and governance pressures. That kind of fluency only comes with time in the field and on the bench.
4. From an investor relations or capital markets perspective—how does a move away from Delaware play with institutional investors, proxy advisors, or ratings agencies?
From an investor relations and capital markets view, leaving Delaware is like switching from IBM computers to an unknown brand. You’re moving away from a trusted, well-established standard to something unproven and uncertain. Without a good rationale to move, shareholders and other observers will be wary. If the goal is to avoid responsibility, that would raise red flags.
5. Some argue that the rise of state competition in corporate governance invites federal intervention. If federal government were to step in more aggressively on governance, who loses, shareholders, executives, or innovation?
Federal preemption is a real risk. State competition in corporate law keeps things balanced and healthy. But like any market, competition can go too far.
If states remove a meaningful role for boards or abandon shareholder primacy, that could cause serious problems.
The federal government has the power to step in—it has before, with Sarbanes-Oxley on audit committees and Dodd-Frank on compensation committees, for example. Delaware’s been very good at defending state-level competition—limiting federal intervention to specific inroads like those rather than a total takeover.
It’s unclear if other states have the same capability—or incentive. Chartering is an important business for the State of Delaware in a way it never will be for large states like Texas or California.
If Congress steps in too much, it would become the monopoly—offering no choice. It would also politicize corporate governance—as has occurred in the case of the shareholder proposal rule. That would hurt everyone concerned—other than the political class.