General Motors cuts ties with Teneo after Declan Kelly misconduct allegations

PR firm left trying to reassure staff and clients

The GM move heightens concerns over the fallout for a group where Declan Kelly has been disproportionately important in attracting leading executives as clients.
The GM move heightens concerns over the fallout for a group where Declan Kelly has been disproportionately important in attracting leading executives as clients.

General Motors (GM) has dropped Teneo as its public relations adviser, deepening the crisis engulfing the firm after allegations that chief executive Declan Kelly inappropriately touched women at a fundraising event.

Teneo is scrambling to reassure its multinational clients, high-profile advisers and 1,200 staff after it was revealed on Thursday that Mr Kelly had been ousted from the board of non-profit group Global Citizen and ceded some of his responsibilities at Teneo after the incident, which took place on May 2nd.

On Friday afternoon, however, GM cut ties. “Following a series of discussions, General Motors has decided to no longer engage with Teneo,” the carmaker told the Financial Times.

The GM move heightens concerns over the fallout for a group where Mr Kelly has been disproportionately important in attracting leading executives as clients. Teneo had won the GM account relatively recently, and Mr Kelly had been advising Mary Barra, its chief executive.

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Global Citizen had organised the celebrity-packed event where, according to three people with knowledge of the matter, Mr Kelly inappropriately touched a number of women without their consent. It removed Mr Kelly from its board the following day and has since cut ties with Teneo, according to two people familiar with the matter.

Until the story first published by the Financial Times on Thursday, the information about Mr Kelly’s actions and his subsequent agreement temporarily to cede some of his duties, had not been shared widely inside Teneo and blindsided all but its most senior employees.

Pressure

The revelation has also put pressure on private equity group CVC, which in 2019 bought a majority stake in the business for $350 million (€293 million). The deal valued Teneo at more than $700 million.

Christopher Stadler, who leads CVC's business in North America and manages the firm's investment in Teneo, is also the chair of Global Citizen.

According to people briefed on the matter, Mr Stadler was at the Global Citizen event where the alleged misconduct by Mr Kelly took place. Mr Stadler and CVC declined to comment.

Global Citizen said on Thursday: “On May 3rd, Global Citizen was notified of the incidents and, on May 3rd, Declan Kelly was removed from the board.”

Mr Stadler himself has previously faced allegations of touching women inappropriately. In a 2016 gender discrimination lawsuit from a former CVC employee, he was said to have “grabbed”, “embraced” and “fondled” female employees. CVC denied the allegations and the case was later settled.

Teneo, which bills itself as the leading global CEO advisory firm, has grown into an influential and well-connected strategy and communications business since it was co-founded in 2011 by Mr Kelly and Doug Band, a former aide to US president Bill Clinton.

The firm's roster of clients includes lucrative retainers with Fortune 500 companies including Dow Chemical, General Electric, Coca-Cola and Delta Air Lines. Much of its work for them focuses on reputational issues, and it has tapped into a wider trend of companies wishing to portray themselves as responsible social actors.

Other clients contacted by the Financial Times either declined to comment or did not respond to requests for comment.

Mr Kelly, who had styled himself as a CEO whisperer able to help the world’s largest companies through their reputational crises, apologised to his senior leadership on a conference call on Thursday. He also sent a note to employees saying he took responsibility for his actions.

‘Inebriated’

The note echoed comments from a spokesman for Mr Kelly, who said on Thursday that he was “inebriated” at the event and was now “committed to sobriety” and “undertaking ongoing counselling from healthcare professionals”.

On Friday, Teneo held a call to brief its UK-based senior advisers – a list that includes former home secretary Amber Rudd and former leader of the UK's Conservative party William Hague – who had not previously been informed about the alleged misconduct. One person who attended said: "There was a call but it was just asking questions and no one had any answers."

In the US, the group's advisers include political figures such as Paul Ryan, the former speaker of the House of Representatives, as well as Andrew Liveris, the one-time Dow Chemical chief executive, Ursula Burns, the former head of Xerox, and Ginni Rometty, the former IBM chief executive.

Tipperary native Mr Kelly is a brother of Labour leader, Alan Kelly. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2021