News

Pelosi On Why Congress Should Be Allowed To Trade Stock After Dozens Broke Law: We ‘Should Be Able To’

   DailyWire.com
UNITED STATES - DECEMBER 15: Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., conducts her weekly news conference in Capitol Visitor Center on Wednesday, December 15, 2021.
Tom Williams / CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi brushed off questions on Wednesday about why Members of Congress should be allowed to trade stock when a recent report found that dozens allegedly broke insider trading laws.

“Madam Speaker, Insider just completed a five‑month investigation finding that 49 Members of Congress and 182 senior Congressional staffers have violated the STOCK Act, the insider trading law,” a reporter said. “I’m wondering if you have any reaction to that.”

“And secondly, should Members of Congress and their spouses be banned from trading individual stocks while serving in Congress?” the reporter asked.

“No, I don’t – no, to the second one. Any – we have a responsibility to report in the stock – on the stock,” Pelosi responded. “But I don’t – I’m not familiar with that five month review, but if the people aren’t reporting, they should be.”

“Why shouldn’t they be banned?” the reporter asked.

“Because this is a free market and people – we are a free market economy,” Pelosi responded. “They should be able to participate in that.”

Pelosi’s husband, investor Paul Pelosi, reportedly trades large volumes of stocks on a regular basis, according to Business Insider.

Pelosi has a net worth of nearly $50 million, according to a separate report from Business Insider:

Pelosi, the speaker of the House, reported personal wealth spread out among property holdings, mutual funds, and stocks owned by her husband. The only assets that Pelosi reported owning or joint-owning were her home in Napa, California, and a Wells Fargo bank account containing less than $15,000.

Pelosi’s husband had holdings in corporations such as Slack , Tesla, Disney, Visa, Salesforce, PayPal, Alphabet, Facebook, and Netflix — companies that together spend tens of millions of dollars each year lobbying the federal government.

Pelosi reported at least $20 million in liabilities that mostly involved mortgages on properties in California and Washington, DC.

WATCH:

TRANSCRIPT:

REPORTER:  Madam Speaker, Insider just completed a five‑month investigation finding that 49 Members of Congress and 182 senior Congressional staffers have violated the STOCK Act, the insider trading law.  I’m wondering if you have any reaction to that.  And secondly, should Members of Congress and their spouses be banned from trading individual stocks while serving in Congress?

NANCY PELOSI, HOUSE SPEAKER: No, I don’t – no, to the second one.  Any – we have a responsibility to report in the stock – on the stock.  But I don’t – I’m not familiar with that five month review, but if the people aren’t reporting, they should be.

REPORTER:  Why shouldn’t they be banned?

PELOSI: Because this is a free market and people – we are a free market economy.  They should be able to participate in that.

Related:

Create a free account to join the conversation!

Already have an account?

Log in

Got a tip worth investigating?

Your information could be the missing piece to an important story. Submit your tip today and make a difference.

Submit Tip
Download Daily Wire Plus

Don't miss anything

Download our App

Stay up-to-date on the latest
news, podcasts, and more.

Download on the app storeGet it on Google Play
The Daily Wire   >  Read   >  Pelosi On Why Congress Should Be Allowed To Trade Stock After Dozens Broke Law: We ‘Should Be Able To’