Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Lawmakers renew push for stock trading ban at House hearing

- Tribune News Service Cq-roll Call

WASHINGTON — A bipartisan cadre of lawmakers speaking Wednesday at a Members Day hearing at the House Administra­tion Committee sought to reignite efforts to tighten the rules for, if not entirely ban, the practice of stock trading among lawmakers.

It’s an issue that has led to a multitude of unsuccessf­ul legislativ­e attempts despite growing calls for change.

Scrutiny of members’ trades has increased since the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic, when reports emerged that lawmakers had traded ahead of a market crash after receiving briefings about the health crisis.

“I don’t come here saying that I think I’ve got all the answers, or that I know exactly what we should do, or shouldn’t do. It’s hard,” said Rep. Chip

Roy of Texas, one of four lawmakers – and the lone Republican – to speak on the issue at the hearing.

“Here’s the simple thing: we don’t want to be projecting to the American people that we are somehow making decisions when we are doing our job here that are connected to our own profit, our own personal financial stake,” he said. Roy in January reintroduc­ed with Rep. Abigail Spanberger, D-VA., a bill that would require members of Congress, their spouses and dependent children to place certain assets into blind trusts.

Reps. Pramila Jayapal, D-wash., and Raja Krishnamoo­rthi, D-ill., joined Roy and Spanberger in calling attention to the issue on Wednesday. Reps. Angie Craig, D-minn., and Andy Kim, D-N.J., submitted written testimony advocating for tougher restrictio­ns, but did not appear in person.

Members spanning the political spectrum — from former Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-calif., to conservati­ve Sen. Josh Hawley, R-MO. — have advocated for various approaches to ban or limit members’ trading. All have ultimately fallen short.

Pelosi backed legislatio­n in 2022 that would have bolstered fines for noncomplia­nce with the Stop Trading on Congressio­nal Knowledge (STOCK) Act of 2012 — which forbids members from trading on nonpublic, material informatio­n they receive as part of their jobs.

She also tasked the House Administra­tion Committee with reviewing various legislativ­e options. The committee, then led by

Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-calif., held a hearing in spring 2022 on the issue, but the panel did not reach a consensus.

Rep. Barry Loudermilk, who continues to serve on the committee, said at the time that bans could inhibit the rights of lawmakers to “participat­e in a free market society.”

Pressure for Congress to act intensifie­d after several lawmakers were accused of dubious deals. The Justice Department took up, then dropped, an investigat­ion into the trading by former Republican Sens. Richard Burr of North Carolina, Kelly Loeffler and David Purdue of Georgia, and sitting Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D., in the time leading up to the pandemic after being briefed on its potential to devastate markets.

House Administra­tion Chair Bryan Steil, R-wis., who took the reins from Lofgren in January, appeared receptive.

“I’m really excited about this topic,” Steil said. “I think one of the big concerns is the appearance of impropriet­y that exists among the American public.” If he takes up the issue, there are a variety of proposals to choose from.

Kim reintroduc­ed a bill Wednesday that would prohibit ownership of individual stocks for members of all branches of government. And Craig reintroduc­ed her own proposal in late February that would require every member of the House to sell their individual stocks and refrain from future stock ownership.

Krishnamoo­rthi, meanwhile, set out a plan that would cover all members, spouses and dependents, requiring them either to divest by placing their assets in a qualified blind trust, or move entirely into mutual and exchange-traded funds, and U.S. treasury bills, notes or bonds.

He and seven House colleagues in February urged Speaker Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif., to bring legislatio­n banning stock trading to the floor. They cited a 2022 survey by conservati­ve advocacy group Convention of

State Action that found 76% of voters – including 70% of Democrats, and 78% of Republican­s – feel members of Congress should not be able to trade stocks.

“Maintainin­g the public’s faith in government is pivotal to preserving Congress’ institutio­nal legitimacy,” he said.

Jayapal’s tack, which she introduced last Congress, would go further by barring blind trusts, which she said often aren’t truly blind and can still pose conflicts of interest. Her bipartisan legislatio­n and its companion in the Senate both died in committee.

The Washington Democrat noted that the fine for violating the disclosure provision of the STOCK Act is just $200, adding that, “Compared to the significan­t profits that members may make from a conflicted asset, this penalty is a drop in the bucket.”

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