Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey penned a scathing tweet over the weekend, calling the company’s board of directors a consistent source of dysfunction after Tesla CEO Elon Musk accused the Twitter board of failing to represent the interests of shareholders.
“What I do know for sure is that this old Silicon Valley proverb is grounded in age-old wisdom that still applies today: Good boards don’t create good companies, but a bad board will kill a company every time,” Destin was cited as saying.
Dorsey commented in the thread by saying these were “big facts,” prompting a user to say that the history of the Twitter board shows that it has been “mired in plots and coups” so intriguing as to merit a “Hollywood thriller one day.”
The Epoch Times has reached out to Twitter for comment.
Dorsey’s remarks came on the heels of a statement by Musk, who accused the Twitter board of not representing the interests of its shareholders.
‘Poison Pill’
Twitter’s board of directors approved on April 15 a provision known in the financial world as a “poison pill” to ward off Musk’s potential hostile takeover, after Musk said he wanted to buy the company for about $43 billion. The poison pill tactic has been used by other companies in the past to dilute outstanding stock and make a hostile takeover more financially challenging for the potential acquirer.Following earlier rumors that Twitter had been mulling a poison pill method after he launched his takeover bid, Musk wrote on Twitter that the move could expose the board to a “titanic” amount of liability because they would be “breaching their fiduciary duty.”
Adam Candeub, a law professor at Michigan State University, told The Epoch Times before the shareholder rights plan decision was announced that the board could face legal consequences if they turn down an offer that’s financially lucrative to shareholders.
“Twitter’s owned by shareholders, and the directors have to act in a way that’s in their best interests, not in the way that allows them to keep control of the corporation,” Candeub said.
“If they turn down a very favorable price, there will be dereliction of their legal duty, and there could be lots of legal consequences.”
Under Twitter’s poison pill provision, if any entity, person, or group acquires 15 percent or more of Twitter’s outstanding stock in a transaction not approved by the board, other stockholders will be able to buy additional shares of common stock at a lower price.