FirstGroup, a pioneering British company that adopted employee directors on its board, has discreetly ended this significant initiative. This marks a symbolic setback to efforts aimed at enhancing worker involvement in corporate governance. Initially introduced in the 1990s, FirstGroup’s policy of including employee representation on its board has been discontinued without detailed explanation, simply citing the “transformation” of its business, notably the reduction of its UK rail operations, now mostly under public sector management.
The move casts doubt on the significance of employee input in British boardrooms. Despite being a central policy suggested by former Prime Minister Theresa May during her 2016 leadership campaign to reshape capitalism post-Brexit, the approach has gained limited popularity. Fewer than a dozen companies listed on the FTSE have adopted this model. FirstGroup’s withdrawal may further deter others from considering it.
Although FirstGroup continues to employ thousands within its UK bus division, there are no indications of plans to reintroduce employee representation there either. Governance experts suggest this withdrawal exemplifies a broader hesitancy within UK corporate culture to incorporate employee perspectives into boardroom decisions effectively.
“FirstGroup was an unusual case of a company that meaningfully included workers in decision-making,” commented one governance adviser. “By quietly abandoning the policy, it risks reinforcing the perception that employee voice in boardrooms is more symbolic than substantial.”
At present, the concept of employee directors seems to be diminishing, not with significant opposition, but rather through gradual indifference.
Read more:
[FirstGroup quietly ends long-running employee director policy](https://bmmagazine.co.uk/news/firstgroup-quietly-ends-long-running-employee-director-policy/)