Nancy Pelosi opposes banning Congress members from owning individual stocks: ‘We’re a free market economy’

Maxxam

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$200 fine?? :lol::smh::smh:

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi scoffed Wednesday at the idea of banning congressional lawmakers and their spouses from owning shares of individual companies, despite the possibilities for conflicts of interest between their legislative duties and personal finances.

“No,” Pelosi, D-Calif., told reporters at a news conference where she was asked whether she would support such a prohibition.

“We’re a free market economy,” she said. “They should be able to participate in that.”

Pelosi’s dismissal of the idea of a stock purchase ban came in response to a question about a Business Insider investigative report this week on share ownership by lawmakers, and after controversies over stock purchases by a number of senators since the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic.

The Business Insider series found that 49 members of Congress and 182 senior-level congressional staffers had violated the so-called STOCK Act, which requires public disclosure by themselves and family members within 45 days of sales or purchases of individual stocks, bonds and commodity futures.

The Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act, which became law in 2012, is supposed to prevent lawmakers and staffers from engaging in trading on information they glean from their jobs, as well as conflicts of interest.

But violations of the STOCK Act, if sanctioned at all, usually result in fines of just $200.

“We have a responsibility to report” stock trades, Pelosi said Wednesday.

The speaker said she was not familiar with the findings of the Business Insider series.

“But If people aren’t reporting [stock trades], they should be,” Pelosi added.

Walter Shaub, former director of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, blasted Pelosi’s reference to the “free market economy” in the first of a series of tweets about the lack of a ban on stock ownership by lawmakers.

“It’s a ridiculous comment!” Shaub wrote. “She might as well have said ‘let them eat cake.’ Sure, it’s a free-market economy. But your average schmuck doesn’t get confidential briefings from government experts chock full of nonpublic information directly related to the price of stocks.”

In another tweet, Shaub wrote, “In an objective world, free of politics, members of Congress would be mocked for the absurdly weak ethics rules they’ve written for themselves.”

In October, the Federal Reserve announced a wide-ranging ban on officials of the central bank owning individual stocks and bonds.
That ban came on the heels of the resignations of two Federal Reserve regional presidents, Robert Kaplan of Dallas and Eric Rosengren of Boston, after disclosures that they had traded individual securities in 2020. Their trades came as the coronavirus rocked markets, and while the Fed itself was engaging in massive purchases of assets aimed at keeping markets stable.

A number of good-government groups and some lawmakers have called for a ban on owning stocks, or mandating that members of Congress put their financial holdings in a blind trust while they are in office.

Allowing lawmakers to continue to own index funds, which track sectors of financial markets, is seen as one way to allow them to get investment returns while limiting the potential for benefiting from information they obtain about individual companies or being perceived as doing so.

In 2019, then-Rep. Chris Collins, R-N.Y., pleaded guilty to federal charges related to tipping off his son about nonpublic information he had obtained about a pharmaceutical company’s failed drug trial, shortly before public disclosure of that information sent the company’s stock into a tailspin.

Collins had for years beforehand touted the prospects of the company, Innate Therapeutics, and was on its board of directors even as he served in Congress.

Collins also was Innate’s biggest shareholder in early 2016, owning more than 17% of the company, or almost 34 million shares. His children, Cameron and Caitlin, were at one point the third- and fourth-largest shareholders, respectively, with each owning 2.65% of the company at that time, or 5.2 million shares apiece.

Collins, who had been serving a 26-month prison sentence, was pardoned by President Donald Trump in December 2020, shortly before Trump left office. Collins had been the first member of Congress to endorse Trump’s first run for the White House in 2016.

Last year, federal prosecutors investigated stock sales made in advance of a Covid-sparked market plunge by and connected to Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., then-Sen. Kelly Loeffler, R-Ga., and Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif.

Those probes ended without criminal charges being filed.

But the Securities and Exchange Commission is conducting a civil investigation of whether Burr and his brother-in-law, Gerald Fauth, and Fauth’s wife engaged in insider trading off of nonpublic information Burr obtained about Covid as part of his job. Fauth is chairman of the National Mediation Board, an agency that facilitates labor-management relations in the U.S. railroad and airline industries.

In August, Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky revealed for the first time in a disclosure report that his wife Kelly had purchased shares of drug company Gilead Sciences in early 2020, one day after the first U.S. clinical trial began for Gilead’s remdesivir as a treatment for Covid-19.

Paul and his wife had not previously bought or sold stock in an individual company in the past decade.

Paul’s disclosure was made more than 16 months after the legal deadline for reporting it under the STOCK Act had passed.

In July, Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., disclosed stock and stock option trades valued at a total of between $894,000 and $3.5 million from January through May.

Like Paul, Tuberville made his disclosure after the expiration of the deadline set by the STOCK Act.
 
(NASDAQ:GOOGL) have become especially controversial since retail traders who have large social media platforms closely follow the trading activity of the politician and analyze it in context of larger developments. For example, Pelosi became the subject of a meme after it was revealed that Paul, her husband, had exercised CALL options to buy 4,000 shares of Alphabet just before an antitrust vote involving the firm in the House Judiciary Committee, making about $5.3 million in the process
 
I bet Nancy has one hell of a portfolio
The only women in the top 25 wealthiest of ALL congressman are as follows:

Rep. Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat from California: $46,123,051
Rep. Sara Jacobs, a Democrat from California: $21,428,125
Rep. Kathy Manning, a Democrat from North Carolina: $27,202,287
Rep. Suzan DelBene, a Democrat from Washington: $52,156,097
Rep. Doris Matsui, a Democrat from California: $73,872,062
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a Democrat from California: $96,518,036

One day people will wake up that BOTH sides are playing their bases. Yes, BOTH sides.
 
The only women in the top 25 wealthiest of ALL congressman are as follows:

Rep. Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat from California: $46,123,051
Rep. Sara Jacobs, a Democrat from California: $21,428,125
Rep. Kathy Manning, a Democrat from North Carolina: $27,202,287
Rep. Suzan DelBene, a Democrat from Washington: $52,156,097
Rep. Doris Matsui, a Democrat from California: $73,872,062
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a Democrat from California: $96,518,036

One day people will wake up that BOTH sides are playing their bases. Yes, BOTH sides.

Would love to see a list of the men… :o

As I suspected. The top 4 are worth almost half billion and all are Republicans CAC from Texas and California

 
If Martha can go to prison for getting a stock tip from a friend then of course the people who make policy that determines winners and losers in the market shouldnt be able to trade those same stocks. Nancy conflating free markets with basic fair play is just an attempt to get socialism / capitalism into the conversation.
 
There's language in the Infrastructure Bill that makes it more difficult for average citizens to participate in tax-deferred investing but politicians can participate in silent insider trading. Nancy Pelosi has call options out on Apple that are going to pay her much bread...
 
There's language in the Infrastructure Bill that makes it more difficult for average citizens to participate in tax-deferred investing but politicians can participate in silent insider trading. Nancy Pelosi has call options out on Apple that are going to pay her much bread...
Of course, that why it received bipartisan support lol
 
They want the discounts for themselves. When will the majority of people wake up and realize these legacy politicians are corrupted. Democrats and repugs. They don't give a fuck about working class people.

Case in point, their issue with crypto. Sooo a person can go for broke in a Casino but must be saved from themselves with Crypto?

Naw, they see normal people making gains they missed out on. They want to structure it so they can get 7/8th's of the pie and leave the last mangy, stale ass slice for the "Citizens". Get these FUCKs outta office!
 
Ranting more on crypto**

Why would a person who doesn't know how to make their way around computer be able or allowed to create legislation on crypto?

Does that make sense?

That's like asking a Hairdresser to frame a 3 story house.
 
Would love to see a list of the men… :o

As I suspected. The top 4 are worth almost half billion and all are Republicans CAC from Texas and California

With all due respect, this is not as revealing as the women's list. We already know what white men and Republicans are about. They don't hide it or deny it. However, these white democratic women are always running game. Pretending to "Be down" in an effort to further their personal agendas. All these women are in the top 1% and pretending to understand the plight of the bottom 80%.

Tricknology
 
The only women in the top 25 wealthiest of ALL congressman are as follows:

Rep. Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat from California: $46,123,051
Rep. Sara Jacobs, a Democrat from California: $21,428,125
Rep. Kathy Manning, a Democrat from North Carolina: $27,202,287
Rep. Suzan DelBene, a Democrat from Washington: $52,156,097
Rep. Doris Matsui, a Democrat from California: $73,872,062
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a Democrat from California: $96,518,036

One day people will wake up that BOTH sides are playing their bases. Yes, BOTH sides.

Dam man...why is it so hard for me to get these numbers...brah
 
Before they are even elevated to state level positions...yur elected representatives are already trained to suck corporate dicks..Most will become millionaires long before even running for national office.

 
With all due respect, this is not as revealing as the women's list. We already know what white men and Republicans are about. They don't hide it or deny it. However, these white democratic women are always running game. Pretending to "Be down" in an effort to further their personal agendas. All these women are in the top 1% and pretending to understand the plight of the bottom 80%.

Tricknology
Who thought that Nancy Pelosi or Diane Feinstein were down? They're elitists and most people are aware of it. The others on the list are people that most people have never heard of.
By the way the richest person in the history of the Senate, Kelly Loeffler who barely lost her Seenate seat to Raphael Warnock last year after being given the seat by Governor Brian Kemp of Georgia. Her worth is 800 million or so.
 
This explains it right here.



I will be updating my stock pucks at the top of the year. I will be adding a new portfolio. I have spent this entire year working on my dividends portfolio. My goal is to have my dividends pay me $50K/yr by 2030.


What you making now... these muffuckaz have 50 mil plus...brah
 
Her holdings are public. She has a better ROI than Warren Buffet.

:lol:

These are the exact same people yall seriously think are going to give you "Equality"

The game is the fucking game.

...and either you smarten up and start playing, or continue to sit on the sidelines and whine and protest hoping that these people pity you enough to give you a few dollars every few years
 
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