James4Nationwide

Elect James Sherwin-Smith to represent Nationwide building society members

Battling the Building Societies; and why we must win (Talk with Transparency Task Force)

LinkedIn event link: https://www.linkedin.com/events/7467897957435113473?viewAsMember=true
TTF event link: https://transparencytaskforce.org/battling-the-building-societies-and-why-we-must-win/

📅 Tuesday 9th June

🕕 6:00pm (Zoom)

🎟 Free to attend (Register HERE)

James will be joining Andy Agathangelou, founder of the Transparency Task Force, next Tuesday for a deep-dive discussion into governance, democracy and accountability inside the UK mutual sector.

Building societies are often presented as the ethical alternative within financial services: member-owned institutions, rooted in mutuality, accountable to customers rather than shareholders. But what happens when ordinary members attempt to exercise meaningful democratic rights within those institutions?

In this talk, James Sherwin-Smith shares the inside story of his campaign to stand for election to the board of Nationwide Building Society as a Member Nominated Candidate — the first in over 20 years —  and what the experience revealed about governance, transparency, accountability and democratic participation across the mutual sector.

Drawing on his background in governance, activism and campaigning, James will explain what first led him to scrutinise the building society sector, why Nationwide became the focal point of his work, and how a campaign that began as an attempt to improve one institution evolved into a broader challenge to systemic issues affecting the UK mutual movement.

The talk will explore:

  • The structural governance weaknesses embedded across many building societies
  • How board control mechanisms can frustrate meaningful member participation
  • The role of AGM procedures, nomination processes and voting systems in preserving incumbent power
  • The tension between mutual ownership in theory and managerial control in practice
  • The wider implications for consumer rights, regulatory oversight and democratic legitimacy in financial services

James will also discuss the current state of play in his campaign, the legal, political and media dimensions now emerging, and the broader opportunity for reform.

Most importantly, this session is intended as a collaborative discussion with fellow campaigners, consumer advocates and governance reformers. James will outline where support, expertise, scrutiny and collective action could help drive meaningful change â€” not only at Nationwide, but across the wider financial services sector.

This session will be particularly relevant for those interested in:

  • Consumer democracy
  • Financial services governance
  • Mutuals and co-operatives
  • AGM and voting reform
  • Transparency and accountability
  • Regulatory capture and institutional power
  • Grassroots campaigning within large institutions

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