Congress moves towards banning members from trading stocks


U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) speaks during her weekly news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., February 3, 2022.

Ken Cedeno | Reuters

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Democratic leaders have greenlighted a plan to craft legislation that would ban members of Congress from trading stock, CNBC confirmed on Wednesday.

At Pelosi’s direction, the House Administration Committee is working on drafting the rules, and the legislation is expected to be put up for a vote this year, likely before the November midterm elections.

In the Senate, several versions of a stock trading ban are under consideration, including one co-authored by progressive Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Montana Republican Sen. Steve Daines.

“When you’re elected, you’re here to serve the people, not the elite, and [a stock trading ban] I think is a step forward, an important step forward, to restore the faith and trust of the American people in this institution,” Daines told CNBC on Wednesday.

Many questions remained Wednesday about what types of investments would be prohibited, what incoming members would be required to do to comply with a new law, and whether family members of lawmakers would also be banned from trading stocks.

Nevertheless, Pelosi’s support for a stock trading ban in the House, first reported by Punchbowl News, represents a significant shift for the Speaker, and comes after years of Congressional leaders on both sides of the aisle rejecting the idea of limiting what investments members of Congress can hold.

In the past, House and Senate leaders have claimed that a ban on stock trading would hurt their party’s efforts to recruit the best candidates to run for Congress. Meanwhile, many of their own families have grown wealthy by investing in the stock market, including Pelosi’s.

Yet in recent months, Pelosi and her top lieutenants have come under growing pressure from rank-and-file members to take action and pass a stock trading ban.

These increasingly noisy calls for a ban have been spurred in part by growing public support for a ban on lawmakers trading stocks.

They also reflect the impact of new revelations about how widespread violations are of the current law, the 2012 STOCK Act, which was designed to prevent insider trading and conflicts of interest in Congress.

Last year alone, 54 members violated the STOCK Act rules, according to an analysis by Business Insider published earlier this year.

“The intent here is to ensure that members and their spouses are not trading or holding individual stocks and bonds and so forth,” Daines said Wednesday. “Listen, you put your assets in a blind trust, you’re still aware of what assets were put in that blind trust. That’s just the reality of it, and we’re trying to reduce the conflicts of interest here.”

There are growing signs that the public supports a ban, too. A recent survey commissioned by a conservative advocacy found that 76% of voters believed that lawmakers and their…



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