Quakers Concerned with Climate Change Worship Outside the Main Line Home of Vanguard CEO Tim Buckley

British Quakers held their own worship service outside Vanguard’s London offices, while Quakers across the United States joined both groups over Zoom. 

WAYNE, PA – On Friday, October 7, almost fifty members of Earth Quaker Action Team (EQAT) walked ten minutes from the St David’s train station to a quiet Main Line street where they unfolded metal chairs and sat down for thirty minutes of powerful Quaker-style silent worship across from the Main Line home of Tim Buckley, CEO of Vanguard.

As one of the largest asset managers in the world, Vanguard has the means to pressure fossil fuel and other companies in its portfolio to shift their business practices away from climate destruction and into alignment with the goals of the Paris Climate Agreement. 

Quakers were joined by Jews and Catholics in praying for Tim Buckley to “come under the weight of the climate crisis.” The group also prayed for divine guidance and courage for themselves as they seek to pressure Vanguard to change course. 

“We are bringing the urgency of the climate crisis to Tim Buckley’s doorstep,” explained Carolyn McCoy, a Philadelphia Quaker and one of the group’s founders. “But we are also sincerely praying for him to show courage, as we seek divine guidance and courage ourselves in the face of the greatest crisis humanity has known.”

The visit to Buckley’s residence is part of the ongoing and global Vanguard S.O.S. campaign.  

In April 2022, EQAT led a 40-mile walk from polluting facilities in Chester along the Delaware River to Vanguard’s headquarters in Malvern. With over 300 people participating, the walk dramatized the connection between Vanguard’s investments and the environmental racism and climate destruction experienced in the Delaware Valley. On September 21 of this year, eight people from EQAT and Extinction Rebellion Philly were arrested at Vanguard Headquarters for refusing to leave when they were denied a meeting with John Galloway, Global Head of Investment Stewardship, who has refused to meet with representatives of the campaign, despite a year and a half of requests. 

EQAT points out that Vanguard is not acting as a good stewardinvesting billions in coal expansion, which is a huge financial risk to Vanguard customers, as well as potentially catastrophic for future generations. This year Vanguard received the worst possible score — zero out of 30 on their climate commitments — in a scorecard ranking 30 major asset managers released by Reclaim Finance. 

After the silent worship across from his home, EQAT plans to deliver a letter to Buckley, urging him to reflect on his own role in averting climate chaos, which Vanguard acknowledges as a “fundamental risk” to its shareholders. The letter will encourage him to participate in the upcoming global COPO27 conference on climate change this November as a first step toward the kind of leadership and stewardship the Vanguard S.O.S. campaign  hopes to see from Vanguard. EQAT’s letter will also explain that people from Hawaii to London were praying for him on October 7, and many will continue to do so.

Part of a month of climate action by people of faith around the world, the October 7 worship also coincides with the 250th anniversary of the death of Quaker abolitionist John Woolman, who visited the homes of Quakers profiting from slavery to encourage them to change course. EQAT takes inspiration from Woolman and previous generations of Quakers, including those in the Delaware Valley who risked going to prison as part of the Underground Railroad and those who risked their lives to oppose nuclear testing. 

“Today, all of us have a role to play in standing up to those who are recklessly threatening our future for short term profit,” says Eileen Flanagan, co-director of EQAT. “Tim Buckley’s role is especially large because his influence is especially large. This may put him in the line of fire of the right wing campaign against responsible climate action, which is why I am praying for his courage, even as I pray for my own strength to continue challenging one of the most powerful asset managers in the world.” 

A few dozen people sit in folding chairs outside with bowed heads and some holding a banner that says "Vanguard invests in climate destruction"
Photo by Rachael Warriner

PHOTOS, RESOURCES, MORE INFORMATION

Photos from the protest can be found here.

A letter to Vanguard CEO with 107 organizational signers can be found here.