Texarkana Gazette

‘Stop Trading’ Act isn’t stopping much

- Joe Nocera

EDITOR’S NOTE: Regular Sunday columnist George Will is on vacation.

In the spring of 2012, Congress passed, and President Barack Obama signed into law, the Stop Trading on Congressio­nal Knowledge Act — or the “Stock Act” for short. It was in response to a “60 Minutes” report in 2011 that documented examples of insider trading by legislator­s and pointed out that it was perfectly legal for them to make trades based on informatio­n they received in, say, private briefings — informatio­n not available to the rest of us. The vote was beyond lopsided: 96-3 in the Senate and 417-2 in the House.

Eight years later, not a single member of Congress has been prosecuted under the Stock Act. True, former Representa­tive Chris Collins of New York went to prison this year for insider trading, but in that case, Collins leaked news to his son about a failed drug test by a biotech company on whose board he sat. His was the kind of insider trading more commonly seen on Wall Street, and he would have been prosecuted even without the Stock Act.

Most lawmakers don’t sit on corporate boards, but they do have access to enormous amounts of material nonpublic informatio­n — informatio­n that is not specific to one company but which nonetheles­s can lead to profitable stock trades if they choose to take advantage of it. And since the onset of the pandemic, trades by several lawmakers have raised deep suspicions.

For instance, four senators made significan­t stock trades after lawmakers’ started to receive briefings about the threat of the coronaviru­s but before markets started to sell off in late February. In May, the Justice Department told lawyers for three of the senators — Kelly Loeffler of Georgia, James Inhofe of Oklahoma and Dianne Feinstein of California — that it was closing the investigat­ion. (All three said that the trades were made by their investment advisers without their knowledge.)

The fourth senator, Richard Burr of North Carolina, sold as much as $1.7 million worth of stock on Feb. 13 after receiving a series of briefings on the pandemic in his role as the chairman of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee. (He has since stepped down from the chairmansh­ip.) The FBI served him with a search warrant and seized his mobile phone in May. But the investigat­ion, if it is still continuing, has been eerily quiet.

And then there’s David Perdue, the Georgia Republican who, along with Loeffler, is in a crucial runoff that will decide whether the Senate remains in Republican hands. On Wednesday, the New York Times published an article documentin­g Perdue’s astonishin­g stock trading; according to the Times, he made as many as 20 trades a day, for a total of 2,596 trades during his six-year term. (A Perdue spokesman told the Times that his investment advisers “handle the day-today decisions of his portfolio.”)

Perdue bought and sold the stock of FireEye, a cybersecur­ity firm, while he sat on a cybersecur­ity subcommitt­ee. Perdue was a member of the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee. He traded shares of JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Bank of America Corp. Before winning his Senate seat, Perdue was a director of Cardlytics, a financial analysis firm. Six weeks before its founder announced he was stepping down as chief executive officer, Perdue sold more than $1 million worth of stock.

“After the company’s stock price bottomed out in March at $29,” the Times reported, “Mr. Perdue bought back a substantia­l portion of the shares that he had sold.” In April, after the initial wave of negative publicity about his stock trading, Perdue sold all his stocks except those companies on whose boards he once sat — including Cardlytics.

What has become clear is that if all this trading is legal, then the Stock Act is toothless. Lawmakers should be avoiding even the hint that they are profiting from inside informatio­n, regardless of whether they say they aren’t involved in the trading decisions.

The problem, for starters, is that legislator­s are so inundated with informatio­n it can be difficult to separate out what is private informatio­n and what is public. More pertinent, the Constituti­on’s “speech and debate” clause confers a certain degree of immunity for anything a lawmaker does in the course of their legislativ­e duties. Receiving a private pandemic briefing certainly qualifies as a legislativ­e duty.

According to Forbes, if Burr can legitimate­ly claim that he used his phone for Senate business, a judge could well rule that prosecutor­s had no legal right to seize its content.

It’s probably never going to be possible to amend the Stock Act to make insider trading by legislator­s a clearcut crime. The Constituti­on — and the broad interpreta­tion of the speech and debate clause by the courts — will most likely always trump efforts to prosecute cases.

Making sure trading is fully above board will require measures that are a lot blunter. A few years ago, Sens. Jeff Merkley of Oregon and Sherrod Brown of Ohio wrote a bill that would force members of Congress to either sell or freeze their stock holdings. It has since been co-sponsored in the House by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York and several other progressiv­es.

Another approach might be to forbid legislator­s from owning stocks in any company overseen by their committees. That would mirror the approach taken by most federal agencies. A third approach would be to allow stock sales only during certain predetermi­ned windows — such as when Congress is not in session.

During his reelection campaign, Perdue has been hammered by his Democratic opponent, Jon Ossoff, over his stock trades. So has Loeffler by her opponent, Raphael Warnock.

There are few things senators care about more than keeping their jobs. If Perdue and Loeffler lose theirs, maybe that will be the example the rest of them need to keep their stock trading above reproach.

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