Robert A. G. Monks
Robert Augustus Gardner Monks was an American author, shareholder activist, corporate governance advocate, attorney, corporate director, venture capitalist and energy company executive — as well as political candidate and Reagan administration official.
Monks co-founded Institutional Shareholder Services, Lens Investment Management, Lens Governance Advisors and The Corporate Library. 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. He resigned as party chair in 1978.
Early life and education
Monks was born in Boston 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.A cousin of Monks' grandmother- from whom came his second name- was the politician Augustus Gardner. 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.
Career
After graduating from law school, Monks became a partner in a law firm in Boston from 1958 to 1965. He was vice president of his family's Gardner Associates and then was president and CEO of C.H. Sprague & Son, a coal and oil company. In 1976, he was made a board member Board of The Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Company and the Boston Company. He was chairman from 1979 to 1981. 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.Appointed as the Administrator of the Office of Pension and Welfare Benefit Programs at the US Department of Labor in December 1983, Monks propounded the view that pension fund managers had an obligation to exercise their voting rights in ways that further the interests of their beneficiaries. It was adopted as Labor Department guidance eventually. Monks continued his advocacy of activist shareholding by founding Institutional Shareholding Services on leaving the department in 1985.
Monks wrote widely about corporate governance and 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.
In The Corporation, a 2003 documentary film, Monks was interviewed about issues of corporations including how their profit models historically involve being "lean, mean, externalizing machines." He said "The corporation is an externalizing machine, in the same way that a shark is a killing machine."
Personal life and death
Monks lived on an island in Cape Elizabeth, Maine, with his wife, née Millicent Carnegie Sprague, great-granddaughter of Thomas Carnegie, the younger brother of Andrew Carnegie. The couple married in 1954 and had two children.Monks continued to affiliate with the Republican Party but was increasingly distant from it in his later years. He supported Barack Obama's re-election in 2012.
Monks died from pancreatic cancer at his home, on April 29, 2025, at the age of 91.