Congressional Conflicts: Stock ban pits affluent, super rich

Spread the love

Washington has become synonymous with polarization between Republicans and Democrats.Yet, legislation that would bar elected officials from owning stocks reveals an additional fault line: supporters tend to be affluent white-collar professionals, while opponents made their millions by founding businesses and/or making investments on Wall Street, an investigation by The Center Square found.

The divide contrasts with near uniformity among ordinary Americans for a ban on politicians trading stocks. They believe lawmakers use information gleaned behind closed doors to enrich themselves, such as members of Congress who bought or sold stock at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020 or before President Donald Trump’s announcement about the putative risk for pregnant mothers to take Tylenol.Capitol Hill lawmakers are required to report their trades within 30 or 45 days. As The Center Square has reported, many violate the deadline with little if any fine or punishment.This summer, 16 House members signed up as cosponsors of draft legislation to ban lawmakers from trading stock. Half were Republicans. Half were Democrats.While their partisan affiliations differed, their income status did not. All but one were in the bottom half of the economic scale among 535 lawmakers, according to Quiver Quantitative, a website that tracks lawmaker’s wealth. U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, a Texas Republican, the bill’s lead sponsor, is a former attorney, investment banking analyst, and congressional staffer. Despite his white-collar credentials, the 53-year-old has a net worth of $1.3 million, a figure that puts him as the 300th wealthiest lawmaker.

Roy’s main Democratic cosponsor, U.S. Rep. Seth Magaziner, of Rhode Island, has a similar professional background. Forty-two, Magaziner has a lower net worth, $651,000, a sum that puts him as Congress’ 373rd richest member.

Other notable cosponsors include U.S. Reps. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, a New York Democrat, whose net worth of $49,000 makes her the 475th wealthiest lawmaker on Capitol Hill, while Tim Burchett, a Tennessee Republican, is worth $41,500, a sum that puts him at the 477th wealthiest.

U.S. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, a Florida Republican, said the bill would reign in wealthy investors on Capitol Hill. “No one sent to Congress should be enriching themselves through Wall Street while writing the very laws that regulates our markets,” Luna said at a press conference Sept. 4. Her net worth, at $590,000, puts her as Congress’ 384th wealthiest member.In July 30, the 15 members of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs met to vote on legislation to ban the president, vice president, and members of Congress from owning stock. The outcome was partisan. Only the bill’s sponsor, U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley, a Missouri Republican, joined all seven Democrats on the panel to vote to advance the legislation. Yet the bill’s most outspoken opponents were among Congress’ richest members.

One was Sen. Ron Johnson, a Wisconsin Republican. A cofounder of a plastics manufacturing firm, the 70-year-old Johnson has a net worth of $67.3 million, a figure good enough for 22nd place in Congress. At the committee hearing on July 30, Johnson said the legislation should be renamed “the career politician-protection act because it would make it so unattractive for people … to run for office and … give up their business and sell it unless some ethics committee said it won’t be a conflict of interest.”Another opponent was U.S. Sen. Rick Scott, a Florida Republican. Scott, 72, is the third wealthiest member of Congress, with an estimated net worth of $507.1 million.

At the July 30 hearing, he suggested his route to riches was different from white-collar professionals on the committee. Instead of attending “some elite university,” he worked his way up from growing up in public housing to founding and running businesses, including HCA Healthcare, one of the nation’s largest hospital chains. He was then elected governor of Florida before going on to Congress. “Somehow, I’m suspect because I made money. Do any of you want to be poor?” Scott asked. “I don’t. It’s disgusting what’s going on here.”

By contrast, U.S. Sen. Ruben Gallego, an Arizona Democrat, graduated from an elite university, Harvard, and after serving in the Iraq War, was a political aide and state lawmaker. Gallego noted, correctly, he is one of the Senate’s poorest members, with a net worth of $121,500. “If we don’t put guardrails in,” Gallego, 45, said at the July 30 committee hearing, “there will be members of Congress that are going to benefit from this, without a doubt, and there will be a further erosion in trust, among Democrats and Republicans, in government.”

Craig Holman, lobbyist for Public Citizen, a nonprofit consumer advocacy group, told The Center Square he was not surprised by a class divide over the stock ban. “Wealthier members of Congress are the ones who would make the most by exploiting stock trading and have the wealth to take those types of risks,” he told The Center Square. “Less wealthy members invest their savings in something more long-term.”

Calls to restrict lawmakers from owning stock began as least as far back as 2012 when President Barack Obama in his State of the Union Address said, “Let’s limit any elected official from owning stocks in industries they impact.”No members of Congress stood up or applauded Obama’s plan, but lawmakers have warmed to proposals in the face of overwhelming public support for a stock ban.According to a 2023 University of Maryland poll, 86% of registered voters said they supported prohibiting members of Congress from trading stocks.

Lawmakers have sponsored numerous legislative proposals since 2020. Democrats have been more likely than Republicans to sign on as cosponsors. But getting a true reading on the partisan divide has not been possible. Neither the House nor Senate has ever voted on legislation to prohibit or restrict lawmakers from buying and selling stock.

In 2022, stock ban proponents thought their time had come. Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat and a former opponent of a stock ban, expressed openness to scheduling a vote on the bill. But six weeks away from the congressional midterm elections, a time when Democrats could have sought to protect their majority by voting on a strongly popular bill, Pelosi scuttled the measure.

Pelosi, 85, is among Capitol Hill’s wealthiest lawmakers. According to Quiver Quantitative, her net worth at $269.6 million ranked fifth. Her husband, Paul, is a venture capitalist who invests in real estate and technology stocks.

One issue does unite many elected officials regardless of their economic circumstances: They show few if any signs of wanting a stock ban applied to them.

Three years ago, Trump announced his support for a ban on lawmakers buying and selling stocks. “We want a ban on members of Congress getting rich by trading stocks with insider information,” he said at the announcement for his third presidential bid at Mar-a-Lago in Florida. “And many of our great members agree with that.”

Hawley, the Missouri Republican, is the main legislative sponsor of a measure that would ban stock trades not only by lawmakers but also the president and vice president.When Trump learned that the bill would apply to him, he denounced Hawley as a “pawn” of Democrats and “a second-tier senator.” After Hawley amended the bill to exclude Trump, White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt clarified that the president “supports the idea of ensuring that members of Congress and United States senators who are here for public service cannot enrich themselves.”

Members of Congress who support a ban would likely not be subject to one for more subtle reasons. They are running for statewide office.

The month before his press conference at the Capitol on Sept. 3, Roy, the bill’s sponsor, announced he was running for attorney general of Texas next year. U.S. Rep. Ralph Norman, a South Carolina Republican and the bill’s wealthiest original cosponsor, had also announced in July he was running for governor.

Rep. Abigail Spanberger, a Virginia Democrat, sponsored a House version of the bill from 2020 until she stepped down from Congress in January. Now she is the Democrats’ nominee for governor of the Old Dominion State.

John Feehery, a lobbyist, columnist, and former spokesman for Republican House Speaker Dennis Hastert, said lawmakers’ runs for higher office show that a stock ban is a bad idea.

“It’s popular and populist, but it reinforces the idea that members are corrupt,” Feehery told The Center Square. “How much do they want to prostrate themselves at the altar of the American people? It hurts the institution.”

Then again, Feehery said a ban could become law.“Some of these populist bills take on a life of their own, and they could pass,” he said.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Trump-era move to limit prison unions draws fire from lawmakers and staff

Trump-era move to limit prison unions draws fire from lawmakers and staff

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Supporters of President Donald Trump’s plan to scale back collective bargaining say union contracts raise taxpayer...
Illinois quick hits: Durbin declines award; nearly $1B in sports betting revenue

Illinois quick hits: Durbin declines award; nearly $1B in sports betting revenue

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Durbin declines award Illinois U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin has decided not to receive an award from the Archdiocese of Chicago for...
WATCH: Trump, Pritzker trade barbs; U.S. Senate talks Chicago; partial government shutdown

WATCH: Trump, Pritzker trade barbs; U.S. Senate talks Chicago; partial government shutdown

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 airs the latest...
WATCH: Trump calls Pritzker 'loser' as governor prepares for troop deployment lawsuit

WATCH: Trump calls Pritzker ‘loser’ as governor prepares for troop deployment lawsuit

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – President Donald Trump says Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker is a “loser” and that the city needs the...
Illinois quick hits: Quantum facility breaks ground; immigration group responds to raid

Illinois quick hits: Quantum facility breaks ground; immigration group responds to raid

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Quantum facility breaks ground Ground is broken for the first project at the planned Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park at Quantum...
Bipartisan senators reintroduce H-1B visa reforms

Bipartisan senators reintroduce H-1B visa reforms

By Andrew Rice | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) — As the Trump administration’s recent efforts to reform the H-1B visa process by adding a one-time $100,000...
WATCH: Illinois student struggles continue as enrollments decline

WATCH: Illinois student struggles continue as enrollments decline

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A public education advocacy group says Illinois students are still struggling with academic proficiency. Advance Illinois held...

Summer 2025 Graduates Announed

Lake Land College is pleased to announce the students who have graduated following completion of the Summer 2025 term. The 2025 Summer graduates are: Name Hometown Degree ...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Lake Land College Board of Trustees for August 18, 2025

The Lake Land College Board of Trustees approved a $117.7 million budget, updated its student hazing policies to comply with a new federal law, and took the first step toward...
Department of Energy returning $13B climate agenda funding to taxpayers

Department of Energy returning $13B climate agenda funding to taxpayers

By Tate MillerThe Center Square The U.S. Department of Energy will be returning to American taxpayers $13 billion in “unobligated wasteful spending” that was originally intended for former President Joe...
Trump directs war secretary to send troops to Portland to protect ICE

Trump directs war secretary to send troops to Portland to protect ICE

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Troops will be sent in to protect immigration and customs enforcement facilities “under siege” in Portland, President Donald Trump said Saturday morning. The president cited...
Trump says he won't back down on Antifa terrorism designation

Trump says he won’t back down on Antifa terrorism designation

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump is moving quickly against an organization that he blames for destruction, looting and protests, another indication the president is acting faster during...
Exclusive: DOJ 'weaponization' victim still in jail, asking for Trump pardon

Exclusive: DOJ ‘weaponization’ victim still in jail, asking for Trump pardon

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square After former FBI Director James Comey was indicted on Thursday and as Congress continues to investigate the “weaponization” of the Biden Department of Justice, one...
Champaign stabbing raises concerns over Illinois mental-health law

Champaign stabbing raises concerns over Illinois mental-health law

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A state lawmaker who also serves as a police officer says the recent stabbing of non-police...
lake land college.2

Lake Land College Invests Over $360,000 in Allied Health Program Technology

Article Summary: The Lake Land College Board of Trustees approved a series of major purchases totaling more than $360,000 to enhance the college’s Allied Health and nursing programs. The investments...