The SPFL must be run as a "democracy not a dictatorship", says Rangers managing director Stewart Robertson after his club produced a dossier criticising the league's governance.
Rangers claim that clubs were not told of a potential £10m liability to sponsors and broadcasters, as well as "substantial problems" with league reconstruction before they voted to end the season.
SPFL board member Robertson said clubs need to "have the right level of say" when it comes to any decisions made.
"When you are distributing £25m worth of prize money and there's the potential of a £10m refund to broadcasters and sponsors, that's a material number," he said. "You have to provide them with all the information that is available.
"We need the SPFL to be run as a democracy, not a dictatorship, and I think we need the clubs to have the right level of say. To have that, they have to know they have trust in the information they've been given.
"Not being able to trust or have confidence in people that you are getting full information makes it very, very difficult.
"I felt we were being railroaded down a particular route. The clubs should have been given options. They should have been allowed to debate them as shareholders and then come to a decision as to what was best for them."
Prior to publishing the dossier, Rangers said they could prove a "lack of fair play" in April's ballot to end the lower leagues and have forced an EGM on 12 May to vote for an independent inquiry.
They also called for SPFL chief executive Doncaster and SPFL legal adviser Rod McKenzie to be suspended.