Bipartisan Senate Bill Would Ban Stock Trading by Lawmakers and Families
Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand, D‑N.Y., and Ashley Moody, R‑Fla., are introducing a bipartisan bill that would ban members of Congress and their immediate family members from owning or trading individual stocks and certain other financial assets, building on a House proposal from Reps. Chip Roy and Seth Magaziner. The legislation, to be filed Thursday, would give sitting lawmakers 180 days after the law takes effect to divest covered holdings and grant newly sworn members 90 days, while prohibiting trades in securities, commodities and futures going forward. Their measure competes with a weaker House Republican leadership bill that would bar new stock purchases by members and spouses but allow them to keep existing portfolios, a plan reform advocates and some lawmakers are already calling watered‑down. The push comes amid years of insider‑trading allegations, criminal probes and polling that shows broad public support for tighter rules, even as leadership in both chambers has repeatedly failed to agree on a single approach. The proliferation of rival bills, including a discharge‑petition effort by Rep. Anna Paulina Luna to force a floor vote on a tougher House ban, will determine whether Congress finally curbs its own ability to personally profit from nonpublic information or once again runs out the clock.
📌 Key Facts
- Gillibrand and Moody’s bill would bar members of Congress and their immediate family members from trading or owning individual stocks, securities, commodities and futures.
- The Senate bill mirrors a House proposal by Reps. Chip Roy and Seth Magaziner that has 125 co‑sponsors and would ban lawmakers from buying or selling individual stocks altogether.
- Existing members would have 180 days after enactment to divest covered holdings; newly elected members would have 90 days from being sworn in.
- House GOP leaders are advancing a rival bill that would stop new stock purchases by members and spouses but allow them to keep current holdings, and would require seven days’ public notice before sales.
- Rep. Anna Paulina Luna is circulating a discharge petition to force a House vote on her own stronger stock‑trading ban and has 79 of 218 needed signatures, mostly from Democrats.
📊 Relevant Data
In 2024, 113 members of Congress made stock trades, with Democrats averaging a 31.1% return and Republicans averaging a 26.1% return, compared to the S&P 500's 23.3% return.
Congressional Stock Trading: Who Trades and Makes the Most — The Motley Fool
Members of Congress made around 10,000 stock trades per year since at least 2021, with 9,261 trades in 2024 involving 706.37 million shares.
Congressional Stock Trading: Who Trades and Makes the Most — The Motley Fool
A 2023 survey found that 86% of registered voters favor prohibiting stock trading in individual companies by members of Congress, with 87% of Republicans, 88% of Democrats, and 81% of independents in support.
Ban on Stock Trading for Members of Congress Favored by Overwhelming Bipartisan Majority — Program for Public Consultation
In 2024, Democrats' congressional portfolios were heavily invested in technology (49% of holdings worth $102.9 million), while Republicans diversified more evenly, with 16% in technology ($44.1 million) and 14% in energy ($39.8 million).
Congressional Stock Trading: Who Trades and Makes the Most — The Motley Fool
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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