Congressional Conflicts: Curb on lawmakers’ stock trades draws fire for being weak

Congressional Conflicts: Curb on lawmakers’ stock trades draws fire for being weak

Spread the love

A limited ban on stock trading by Congress might get a vote next year after a 2012 law did not do enough to stem the practice that critics say is legal insider trading.The Center Square has been investigating the trades of lawmakers on key committees, finding trades that raise questions about the actions and timing.Since 2022, members of Congress have introduced measures to ban lawmakers from trading stocks altogether. Both last year and this July, the Senate Homeland and Governmental Affairs Committee advanced a stock-ban bill. Neither chamber has scheduled a vote on legislation despite overwhelming public support for a stock ban. According to Politico, House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, a Louisiana Republican, said he expects by early next year to vote on a bill that would permit lawmakers to keep stocks they own but bar them from buying new stocks. They would be required to provide seven days of notice before selling their current stocks.U.S. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, a Florida Republican, filed what is known as a discharge petition to force House leadership to vote on a bill that would prohibit members of Congress, spouses and dependent children from trading stocks. As of Dec. 22, the petition has 74 signatories, far short of the 218 required.A statute passed more than a decade ago that was supposed to address the issue of Congressional stock trading has come under fire for being too lax as lawmakers continue to trade before key announcements, investigations by The Center Square found.

Tylenol tradesIn the last half year alone, three lawmakers each dumped stock in Kenvue Inc., the Summit, New Jersey-based maker of acetaminophen, the primary active ingredient in Tylenol, ahead of a government announcement questioning whether the use of the drug by pregnant women is linked to autism.

They did so despite recommendations from most financial analysts that investors buy or hold their shares. Since the government’s announcement, Kenvue’s stock has tumbled from roughly $21 a share this summer to less than $17 a share as of Dec. 22, a 19% decrease.

U.S. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island and U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna of California, both Democrats, reported that their wives sold $1,001 to $15,000 of the company’s stock in late August.That was less than a month before Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., said the federal government would slap a label on Tylenol tablets warning pregnant mothers that taking the popular painkiller could cause their unborn children to develop autism. The overwhelming consensus among scientists and medical researchers is there is no causal link between using Tylenol and developing autism.

A Whitehouse spokeswoman, Meaghan McCabe, did not return two emails seeking comment, while a spokeswoman, Sarah Drory, for Khanna issued a statement.

“Rep. Khanna doesn’t trade stocks, has pushed for years for a ban on trading and for the TRUST in Congress Act requiring independently managed trusts, and his voting record shows he is bold and principled in standing up for his values,” Drory said.

U.S. Rep. Scott Franklin, a Florida Republican, reported that through a joint account with his wife, he sold $1,001 to $15,000 of stock in Kenvue on June 16. He dumped the stock while serving as the vice chairman of a House Appropriations subcommittee that oversees the Food and Drug Administration’s budget, the federal agency that regulates Tylenol.

A Franklin spokeswoman, Melissa Tarte, did not return an email for comment. Disclosures delayed

In the last 12 months, three lawmakers blew past multiple deadlines to report their stock trades. U.S. Sen. Markwayne Mullin, an Oklahoma Republican and one of Congress’s richest members, filed what are known as periodic transaction reports beyond the 30-to-45-day deadline three times. Two House Republicans, Neal Dunn of Florida and David Taylor of Ohio, filed two reports past the deadline.

Mullin’s office did not return a phone call for comment, while those for Dunn and Taylor did not return emails.

Until 2012, members of Congress were required to disclose their stock trades once a year. The Stock Act requires members of all three branches – the legislative, judicial, and executive – of the federal government and their families and staff to report their sale or purchase of stock, bonds, and commodities within 30 to 45 days. If they miss the deadline, they are to be fined under a sliding scale that starts at $200 per tardy report.

On final passage in early 2012, the legislation sailed through both houses of Congress with only a handful of dissenters. “Send me a bill that bans insider trading by members of Congress, and I will sign it tomorrow,” President Barack Obama said at the State of the Union Address that year, a comment that prompted lawmakers to stand and applaud for 13 seconds.

Obama did just that in April 2012. For years, the law enjoyed public support with no serious attempts to amend or replace it.Craig Holman of Public Citizen, a lobbyist who helped write the Stock Act, said in an interview that he conducted research on the law’s effects. He found that the share of lawmakers who traded stocks decreased by more than one-quarter.“They just didn’t want to deal with the hassle of reporting the trades and getting bad publicity from them,” Holman said in an interview this summer.

By 2020, the Stock Act drew fire for failing to do what Obama said it did: prohibit U.S. officials from using insider information to profit on Wall Street. Then Sen. Richard Burr, a North Carolina Republican, reported selling $628,000 to $1.72 million of his holdings in stocks in mid-February 2020 after he received closed-doors briefings about the emerging coronavirus pandemic.

Burr was chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee and a member of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. He said he obtained information about the pandemic from CNBC and other public sources. The FBI seized Burr’s cellphone, but the Justice Department announced in January 2021 that it had closed its criminal probe into his stock sales.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Judge denies Madigan’s motion to remain free pending appeal

Judge denies Madigan’s motion to remain free pending appeal

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – U.S. District Court Judge John Robert Blakey has denied former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan’s request to...
The U.S. Department of Education launches nationwide tour

The U.S. Department of Education launches nationwide tour

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square The Department of Education launched a national tour this month in its continuing efforts to dismantle the agency and revert power back to the states....
Trump takes aim at Chicago crime, no-cash bail while singling out Pritzker

Trump takes aim at Chicago crime, no-cash bail while singling out Pritzker

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – President Donald Trump says Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker is incompetent, that he may send the national guard...
Burrows: Only thing standing in the way of disaster relief are missing Democrats

Burrows: Only thing standing in the way of disaster relief are missing Democrats

By Bethany Blankley | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square ) – Texas House Speaker Dustin Burrows, R-Lubbock, gaveled in the Texas House on Monday, and again,...
Trump confirms Nvidia chip agreement

Trump confirms Nvidia chip agreement

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Nvidia will pay the United States 15% of the money it makes from selling artificial intelligence chips to China, President Donald Trump said in a...
States challenge federal report promoting coal plants

States challenge federal report promoting coal plants

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Michigan has joined a coalition of states challenging a Department of Energy report claiming the U.S. will face a significantly increased risk of power outages...
U.S. Supreme Court could rule on Texas lawsuits brought in Democratic-led state courts

U.S. Supreme Court could rule on Texas lawsuits brought in Democratic-led state courts

By Bethany Blankley | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – If courts in Democratic-led states don’t honor a request by the Texas House of Representatives to...
WATCH: Illinois In Focus Daily | Monday Aug. 11th, 2025

WATCH: Illinois In Focus Daily | Monday Aug. 11th, 2025

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square Editor Greg Bishop reviews the latest...
Illinois quick hits: Judge denies Madigan's motion; legislator urges action on DCFS interns

Illinois quick hits: Judge denies Madigan’s motion; legislator urges action on DCFS interns

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Judge denies Madigan's motion U.S. District Court Judge John Robert Blakey has denied former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan’s motion to...
Everyday Economics: CPI takes center stage as tariff-driven price pressures mount

Everyday Economics: CPI takes center stage as tariff-driven price pressures mount

By Orphe DivounguyThe Center Square The economy was already slowing, and that was before higher tariffs kicked in last week, raising import taxes to the highest level since the Great...
Details pending on billions in foreign investments coming from trade deals

Details pending on billions in foreign investments coming from trade deals

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square When President Donald Trump announced a string of trade deals with key U.S. trading partners recently, he touted pledges for billions of dollars in U.S....
Negative net migration is harmful to the economy, economists say

Negative net migration is harmful to the economy, economists say

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square Though the economy and immigration were issues that helped President Donald Trump secure the White House, some economists have said that too steep a decline...
WCO-Finance-Aug-5.1

Will County Health Department Seeks $1 Million to Avert ‘Drastic’ Service Cuts from Expiring Grants

ARTICLE SUMMARY: The Will County Health Department is requesting an additional $1 million in county funding for its 2026 budget to prevent the elimination of 11 critical staff positions, warning...
WCO-Cap-Imp-8.5.1

Will County’s “First-in-Nation” Veterans Center to House Workforce Services, Sparking Debate

ARTICLE SUMMARY: The new Will County Veteran's Assistance & Support Center will also become the home for the county's Workforce Services department, a move officials say will save approximately $250,000 in...
WCO-Finance-Aug-5.2

Improved Vendor Service Creates $1.2 Million Shortfall in Sheriff’s Medical Budget

ARTICLE SUMMARY: The Will County Sheriff’s Office is facing a more than $1.2 million shortfall in its budget for inmate medical services, a problem officials attribute to an ironic cause:...