A
joint announcement made yesterday says that Disney
and Gold have agreed not to run a rival slate of directors
or submit shareholder resolutions for the next five
years. In return, Roy Disney has been made director
emeritus and a consultant of the company.
The
brief announcement also affirmed the company's "commitment
to the rotation of committee members and chairpersons
on its Board committees as currently required by the
company's corporate governance guidelines."
The
key mover in getting this long-festering sore in Disney's
side sorted out was CEO-elect Bob Iger (he replaces
Michael Eisner on 1 October, one year before Eisner's
contract expires). The agreement was reportedly reached
after a number of meetings between Iger and the long-time
two Eisner-baiters.
Roy
Disney's problems with the workings at the company
his uncle founded date as far back as 1977 which was
when he resigned as an executive due to disagreements
with his colleagues' decisions at the time.
When
the board of directors rejected Disney's request for
an extension of his term as board member, he announced
his resignation on 30 November, 2003, citing "serious
differences of opinion about the direction and style
of management" in the company. He then issued
a letter accusing Eisner of mismanaging the company,
neglecting the studio's animation division, failures
with ABC, timidity in the theme park business, instilling
a corporate mentality in the executive structure,
turning the Walt Disney Company into a "rapacious,
soul-less" company, and of refusing to establish
a clear succession plan.