Congress Quickly And Quietly Rolls Back Insider Trading Rules For Itself
from the can't-mess-with-the-profits dept
In November of 2011, the TV show 60 Minutes did a big expose on insider trading within Congress. While everyone else is subject to basic insider trading rules, it turned out that members of Congress were exempt from the rules. And, as you would imagine, many in Congress have access to market-moving, non-public information. And they made use of it. To make lots and lots of money. Of course, after that report came out and got lots of attention, Congress had to act, and within months they had passed the STOCK Act with overwhelming support in Congress to make insider trading laws that apply to everyone else finally apply to Congress and Congressional staffers as well. As that link notes:
The lopsided votes showed lawmakers desperate to regain public trust in an election year, when the public approval rating of Congress has sunk below 15 percent.
Of course, here we are in 2013 and, lo and behold, it is no longer an election year. And apparently some of the details of the ban on insider trading were beginning to chafe Congressional staffers, who found it hard to pad their income with some friendly trades on insider knowledge.
So… with very little fanfare, Congress quietly rolled back a big part of the law late last week. Specifically the part that required staffers to post disclosures about their financial transactions, so that the public could make sure there was no insider trading going on. Congress tried to cover up this fairly significant change because they, themselves, claimed that it would pose a “national risk” to have this information public. A national risk to their bank accounts.
It was such a national risk that Congress did the whole thing quietly, with no debate. The bill was introduced in the Senate on Thursday and quickly voted on late that night when no one was paying attention. Friday afternoon (the best time to sneak through news), the House picked it up by unanimous consent. The House ignored its own promise to give Congress three days to read a bill before holding a vote, because this kind of thing is too important to let anyone read the bill before Congress had to pass it.
And, of course, yesterday, President Obama signed it into law. Because the best way to rebuild trust in Congress, apparently, is to roll back the fact that people there need to obey the same laws as everyone else. That won’t lead the public to think that Congress is corrupt. No, not at all.
Filed Under: congress, corruption, insider trading, transparency
Comments on “Congress Quickly And Quietly Rolls Back Insider Trading Rules For Itself”
Corruption
Sounds about right.
Re: Corruption
Most. Appropriate. Avatar. EVAR.
Re: Re: Corruption
I second that.
Re: Re: Re: Corruption
I third that sentiment.
Re: Corruption
that remindes me the old saying from the Greatest Generation (circa around 1901 through 1924) “Don’t steal government hates competition” I guess the lessen they have learned were lost… probably since we have send them to nursing homes instead of letting them teach the kids about history.
I find this disheartening
Your post is so cynical….
Here we have a supreme example of overwhelming bipartisanship and all you can do is whine and complain….
Re: I find this disheartening
Why is it that the only things congress can agree on seem to be only the worst, most corrupt and onerous laws.
For instance, SOPA/PIPA initially had wide bipartisan support.
But when it comes to something important, like a budget, they cant seem to deal with it.
Re: Re: I find this disheartening
Because the first category(corrupt and onerous laws) tend to lead to ‘donations’ sent their way, while the second, doesn’t.
Re: Re: I find this disheartening
I believe he was kidding.
Re: I find this disheartening
So about that “Sad but True” button…?
Re: I find this disheartening
Youre an idiot. bi-partisan on what? The idiots in Washington hasnt agreed on squat in 15 to 20 years. You’d better wake your tail up.
Re: I find this disheartening
Youre an idiot. bi-partisan on what? The idiots in Washington hasnt agreed on squat in 15 to 20 years. You’d better wake your tail up.
Re: Re: I find this disheartening
I am interested in the etymology of the idiomatic expression, “wake your tail up.” Pretty sure you made it up because it sounds idiotic, much like the rest of your post(s).
Re: Re: I find this disheartening
Bi-partisan on the POINT of the ENTIRE BLOG ENTRY!!!
Did you skip right to the comments and not bother to read the blog?
It was a pretty short entry on how:
THE SENATE, HOUSE and PRESIDENT all WORKED TOGETHER.
That’s pretty much Bi-partisan.
Sigh.
Re: I find this disheartening
Re: I find this disheartening
Are you implying that as long as a law is passed with bipartisanship it is okay?
You think this one little law, put back into place, will restore the trust in our government?
Someone’s been drinking the Kool-Aid again.
Americans no longer trust their government, and, in my opinion, won’t settle until the House is cleaned of the roaches now infesting it.
Re: Re:
Unfortunately the only way to get rid of the roaches is filling the government with rats. The replacements are as bad as the incumbents.
Re: Re:
The sad part is that there are plenty more roaches ready and willing to take their place and are just as corrupt. If only we could go back to having citizen congressmen that come together for a short time and go back to their jobs; thereby allowing others to take their place. This is the sort of crap that happens when you let a government body pass laws that affect themselves without input from the public. Congress should never be allowed to pass or amend a law resulting in an exemption for themselves or specifically targeted at themselves. Congressmen should be regarded as any other citizen.
Re: Re: Re:
Any amendments to law should require like two weeks of prior public review. This whole, change a law last minute and pass it before anyone notices has gotten out of control.
Re: Re: Re: Re:
It should also be noted that (and I am merely more clearly expressing what the OP already says), as a legislator, you are an insider because the laws that you maybe planning to pass or the legal proposals that you may have access to that the public doesn’t yet can affect industries, companies, and stocks and that can affect how you invest your money. If you know that a new proposal may help industry A and another regulation may hurt industry B you may invest accordingly. If the public is not yet aware of these proposals then that’s inside information and you are engaging in insider trading.
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
Obama’s Promise??? PLEASE!!!!! Are you so dense that you would ever believe anything that came out of this small-time politician’s pie-hole?????
Re: Re: Re:
The really bizarre thing is that they are all answerable to their electorates and those idiots keep voting for them. Average citizens vastly outnumber special interest groups but prefer to keep voting for the same types of people and then complaining about what they do rather than doing anything about it. Like teachers who can’t control their classes the problem isn’t that they sometimes misbehave its that when they do no one in charge takes any responsibility.
Re: Re:
You think this one little law, put back into place, will restore the trust in our government?
Nothing can restore trust in government on its own. But you gotta start somewhere. Journey of a thousand miles, and all that.
Re: congress criminals
Congress worries very little about trust in government. That is, unless it goes to the point to where it looks like some HUTAs are about to get their heads out of their asses. Then they will throw out a little tidbit. Destruction of all manind will be the only thing tyhat will change any of the criminal actions of the criminal government.
The rule of law has been replaced by the rule of lawyers. Oh well, it’s not like the United States government has ever tortured anyone, so let’s cut them some slack.
Re: Response to: Anonymous Coward on Apr 16th, 2013 @ 11:27am
That you know of
Re: Response to: Anonymous Coward on Apr 16th, 2013 @ 11:27am
That you know of
Hopefully now that money is involved more people will care about the abuse of national risk/security excuses when clearly it’s anything but.
lol. Just loooooool. Democracy!! LOOOOOL
Re: Re:
laughing out out out out out out out out loud?
Re: Re: Re:
I guess he needs to get out more…
I am going to make sure as many people know about this as possible. This sort of corruption fills me with so much rage. Then to think about congress getting away with it and not having to answer for this sort of non-sense at all makes me rage cup runneth over.
Every pundit in the US, both right and left should be grilling our elected officials over this one.
Re: Response to: Ryan Good on Apr 16th, 2013 @ 11:44am
Unbelievable. I’d call them pigs but I don’t want to insult those mud loving animals.
Re: Response to: Ryan Good on Apr 16th, 2013 @ 11:44am
No. The pundits are there to channel our anger so we won’t act upon it. Some companies use this very effective tactic as well. For example, UPS: They allow their hourly workers who don’t meet with the public to yell and complain (and swear) as much as they like as long as they don’t harass anyone. It keeps them from going postal.
These People Have Hard Jobs
The least we could do is let them make a little money. It is not like there is a victim. Even if there is, its too boring to talk about. Plus, this is what the corporation “The United States of America” is all about. Making that $$$$.
If “We the People” want a voice in “These United States” then we need to dissolve the corporation that our government has been outsourced to. They apparently can’t protect us from “terrorist” attacks while they steal, bend the rules and remove peoples rights.
It is time to start prosecuting white collar crime like it is copyright infringement or hacking.
Re: These People Have Hard Jobs
not sure why they’d need to have even more money. congress is a funnel for k street. when they leave public service, they become lobbyists and their pay goes up 1000% http://www.ted.com/talks/lawrence_lessig_we_the_people_and_the_republic_we_must_reclaim.html
High Court, Low Court. New framework, old standards.
What? They didn’t slip in gun control, anti-abortion restrictions, immigration, gay marriage / civil union rights, medical marijuanna, birth control, or any of the other hot topics meant to distract the public from what’s REALLY going on?
And then they wonder why people don’t vote. We have a one nation party. I’m sure this serves the corporate-types leaking the information, sort of a merry-go-round among the 1%.
“Friday afternoon (the best time to sneak through news), the House picked it up by unanimous consent. The House ignored its own promise to give Congress three days to read a bill before holding a vote…”
And there goes the Faux Tea Party / libertarian idealists if they don’t want to admit thier hero’s are in the same boat with everyone else. If they weren’t corporate-backed, these kind of shennanigan’s should create tidal waves. I’ll be interested to hear how it’ll spun, if it makes the news at all.
Re: Re:
oops. One party nation.
I wish there was an edit button.
Re: Re: Party
A one nation party sounds like a blast…but who would choose the music?
Re: Social issues only, no fiscal or foreign policy
This is becoming impossible for me to ignore, that
“gun control, anti-abortion restrictions, immigration, gay marriage / civil union rights, medical marijuana, birth control, or any of the other hot topics [are] meant to distract the public from what’s REALLY going on”.
Seems that way to me too. Sadly, it also seems that regulations, which should help, are being used to serve other, quite separate agendas.
Re: Response to: Anonymous Coward on Apr 16th, 2013 @ 12:03pm
Spot on.
Re: Re:
the news is controlled by govt and business
And they wonder why their approval ratings are so low…
OUR SERVANTS should always have to prove innocence,
should be jailed on accusation, denied counsel, and quickly tried by a jury of The People. — And that’s fully Constitutional: they’ve agreed to be SERVANTS. The penalty here would be only removal from office; it’s NOT yet to criminal level, but could be after investigation. — You don’t retain full civil rights when serve in the military: why should those who explicitly wish to rule us retain full rights? — The problem is that being elected confers super-rights.
Simple and fully valid solution is to pull down the Rich and powerful: they’re ALWAYS crooks.
Re: OUR SERVANTS should always have to prove innocence,
Just like a worker should have to prove they are worth hiring.
Re: OUR SERVANTS should always have to prove innocence,
Sheesh are you ever inconsistent.. Do you get paid per trolled thread or something?
You can’t possibly honestly stand behind the sentiment behind your statement here. It’s ridiculous. Of course elected officials should have to convince people of their innocence or risk people not voting for them. It’s not a right to be an elected official, you don’t need a trial to get rid of the ones who walk, talk and act corrupt. If you did, you would never have a prayer of getting rid of any corruption unless they decided they wanted to let you.
Re: Re: OUR SERVANTS should always have to prove innocence,
“Sheesh are you ever inconsistent.. Do you get paid per trolled thread or something?”
That’s my theory about the boy.
Re: OUR SERVANTS should always have to prove innocence,
“Simple and fully valid solution is to pull down the Rich and powerful (including studio heads): they’re ALWAYS crooks.”
Even a stopped clock is right twice a day.
Re: Re: OUR SERVANTS should always have to prove innocence,
Define Rich… Now welcome to the slippery slope (sorry i cant stand those statements).
Are some ppl rich? Yes
Are some ppl crooked? Yes
but the 2 together are not always true… Some of the greatest richest ppl give it all away or very large portions to make new science, new medicine, help the homeless, help educate (my personal one), and to feed the hungry… Who gets to decide what rich is? if all rich are bad, why do so many non-rich play the lotto? if being rich is bad why do so many ppl make a company?
They're all about to sell
What they don’t want to reveal is that all of them are about to divest their portfolios… they know shit’s about the hit the fan, and they don’t want the public to know yet. And they’ll be damned if they’ll be left holding the bag when it happens.
Re: They're all about to sell
^This^ It’s the same thing when Cyprus banks were about to lock everyone out and told the Russian crime syndicates to get their money out before they did. Get ready for the coming crash.
Here we go again
Repeal the Glass?Steagall Act, bankrupt the nation with incestuous insiders running the country. Next on the agenda, repeal the insider trading laws so these same banker/congressmen can continue raiding our tax dollars. Oh and sprinkle special exemptions for certain large investment firms to trade commodities unlike us. Oh and allow high frequency trading (AKA front running), but throw anyone else in jail who tries to do the same thing. Yes, no surprise here.
One of Obama's many broken promises
What happened to Obama’s promise to post all bills on the internet for 5 days before he signs it?
Re: One of Obama's many broken promises
“What happened to Obama’s promise to post all bills on the internet for 5 days before he signs it?”
The Republicans probably told him they did so.
Re: One of Obama's many broken promises
Obama’s promise?????? Are there any people who are not as smart as a fifth grader that actually believe anything that comes out of this small-time Chicago politician’s pie-hole??
PRESS?
Where the hell is the MEDIA on this?
Re: PRESS?
Busy paying off the exact same corrupt politicians who voted this in.
Re: Re: PRESS?
Was that supposed to be ‘Busy being paid by the exactly same corrupt politicians who voted this in.’ ?
Re: PRESS?
Busy trying to desperately find a Muslim who’s responsible for the Boston attacks.
Re: PRESS?
“Where the hell is the MEDIA on this?”
You said it yourself. We don’t have PRESS in this country any more, we only have MEDIA. One is beholden to the citizenry, the other to the Corpratocracy. Your guess as to which goes to which.
Re: PRESS?
The media is busy with the Boston marathon suspects….it was the right time to slide any bill by …. Purposely while our eyes are on human disaster.
Welcome to the United states of america, Cesspool of corrupt politicians who think they are above the law.
While they're at it,
why didn’t they vote themselves a pay-raise and some tax immunities?
I guess they don’t need to hide anymore that they aren’t there for the little people.
now who is still of the opinion that what Congress does is for the good of the people and in the peoples best interests? who now can see that every law that is passed is done so it has maximum detrimental impact on the people and minimal impact (if any at all!) on the rich and powerful! who also now believes the ‘revolving door’ syndrome that exists between Congress and the industries that pay a fortune every year to ensure that what they want is what they get? there isn’t a single politician that is in office for any reason other than to increase the size of his/her bank account and they dont mind how many or the size of the lies they have to tell to get it!!
Scandal Handlers and Schemes
Yeah, its funny how they acknowledge its a law to protect themselves. Yet, leave the public vulnerable to insider traders and copy cats, encouraging them to break laws. This is a scandal and hidden scheme of Congress and its wrong.
STOCK Rewind
So it holds true about the power of corruption and who’s left holding the bag? Not Congress.
Who cares
America is a shithole. Get what you can now before your country goes the way of Cyprus. Your government is the most corrupt organization in the world, one that regularly assassinates people, including Americans, to promote its policies. Enjoy your shithole.
Re: Who cares
Its not like other countries are much better for the most part everyone is corrupt we just get to see our corruption. I like being able to see the problem it gives me something to aim to fix. Without that I can only complain without knowing what’s going on. If your going to trash talk a country that isn’t yours then name your country so we can compare.
Re: Who cares
America is a shithole. Get what you can now before your country goes the way of Cyprus. Your government is the most corrupt organization in the world, one that regularly assassinates people, including Americans, to promote its policies. Enjoy your shithole.
Wow. Do you say this to the citizens of North Korea and the People’s Republic of the Congo? How about Greece? Enjoy your shithole?
We don’t like living in a place where civics include institutionalized corruption. It just happens to be our home.
Feel free to come in with your imperial swag and build us roads and teach us literacy, if you really think it’ll help.
Source says differently, even worse!
Firedoglake sourced it from The Hill, which says that the more stringent disclosure and reporting requirements will still apply to the president, vice president, members of Congress, candidates for Congress, and some nominees. This is the ridiculous part (via Obama signs STOCK stepback):
There are 28,000 senior government officials EXCLUDING all the members of Congress?! Or considered senior enough such that disclosure of financial information on a publicly available online database was:
Obama shouldn’t have signed it into law if it were going to endanger government employees posted overseas! But he did, to get a big flashy spotlight of attention back when he wanted to be popular. Then he gets most of it repealed quickly, over a weekend, with complicity of both parties. We aren’t idiots! That makes me feel MORE distrustful of government, rather than less.
Re: Source says differently, even worse!
Some of the talent in the private sector is already plenty unethical. Maybe we don’t really want them in the public sector. I say let ’em go.
This article has been linked at a popular website which allows people to comment on the article. (I don’t know what the rules are here for inserting a link to that website).
This has created a firestorm (to put it mildly) regarding the truthfulness of both the title and contents of this article.
According to the postings at the other site, Congress exempted a lot of high level government employees/appointees from reporting financial information, but members of Congress, the President, and Vice President are not included in this revision to the law… which means Congress didn’t actually exempt themselves from anything.
The postings at the other site include the PDFs of the changes and it does appear that Congress is still on the hook for financial reporting and Insider Trading restrictions.
Re: Congress, insider trading
Yes, Congress IS still required to disclose financial information. They did NOT exempt themselves from the provisions of the STOCK law.
This article here, in TechDirt, is being quoted as evidence that the law was rolled back in its entirety. That is not true.
American Dream? Fuck That.
Once upon a time in America there was such a thing as the American Dream. Not something we’d ever achieved, but that we were working towards.
When most people hear “American Dream” they imagine a good middle class living, but those were the symptoms.
Basically the American Dream was the hope that some day ours would be a true meritocratic economy: an honest day’s work for an honest day’s pay.
Nowadays it’s an illusion, while big corporations evade taxes with a double Irish with a Dutch sandwich, and people with money to invest can put it all in Halliburton just before a big war.
Now it looks like they’re not even trying. There is no interest in balancing the income disparity or the wealth disparity. If you’re born a Romney, you’re as good as nobility, and you are considered to have as much divine right (in this case divine right by money) as if you were born a Tudor.
America is dead.
Congress and insider trading
Are you kidding me?
The president has gone too far once again. This Congress and our president continue to violate the Constitution and show American citizens the total disdain they have for us.
The actions of both our President and Congress over the last two decades has been deplorable at best.
Do they really think they are too big to fail?
The straw that broke the camels back fell on the camel a long time ago. Now the straw is burying the camel.
This is a complete lie!!The main concern about the bill — which there was no point in his vetoing, even if he’d wanted to, since it was passed quickly and by unanimous consent — is that those who’re required to file financial disclosure forms won’t have to post them online, as the original STOCK Act mandated. That, however, doesn’t make them any more difficult to access than previously but, of course, it doesn’t make it easier, either.
Pigs at the trough
How can they ever be taken seriously that congress is working for the people, the gravy train is leaving the station and they are all aboard without exception.
Insider Trading
No I see how our congressman going into office was worth 750 grand and after 4 terms worth 22 million. Skunk in the wood pile some hwere.
O’s signed it?
To use against the R’s in 2014 I bet.
Is anyone surprised that this started in the Senate?
Reid is so ethical.
put them in jail if they use insider trading
Rules in this country apply to everyone even Royalty like Congress, Senate, President, Supreme Court, associates who assist legislators. If they breach insider trading rules, they should be tried and go to jail. It is about time to put them in jail as they did to Martha Stewart for an insignificant trade she made. Everyone must follow the rules of law, including legislators, their assistants and associates and all in government. If breached, make an example and send them to jail.
So vote already
Moral outrage is all well and good. Voting is better.
Re: So vote already
So who are you going to vote for? The Chinese scorpion or the death-adder?
Time to clean house
congress exempting it's self or staff.
If congress wont put this to vote for the record by name and state for the public record it should not be allowed. They need to be held to their vote by the voters, if not, remove them from office.
Ha. Ha. Ha.
1776
Once upon a time there was a land
of bold and brave
Whose founding Fathers firm inground do stand
within their graves.
There was such a wondrous land to stay,
The Land of Free
As long as one obey as sheeple prey
The Powers That Be.
There was but once a God, Who was revered
as manners state
— Now it is but commonsense inversed,
Worshiping State.
This is disgusting
Seems that some animals are, indeed, more equal than others.
Maybe I’ve been watching to much tv, but is it to far of a stretch to think that our government was behind what happened in Boston to deflect any attention that may come their way during this process?
Maybe I’ve been watching to much tv, but is it to far of a stretch to think that our government was behind what happened in Boston to deflect any attention that may come their way during this process?
That's our CONgress!
That’s our CONgress!
somebody didn't get the memo!
Bad move on their part (congress), with all the signs now pointing to the masses getting really, really, really upset with our government (daily protests, bombings, shootings, fires, ricin being mailed to politicians, etc), this was a bonehead move, sure to provoke more distain and loathing by a population that has already been through too much to deal with (90+ million unemployed, 100+ million who have lost their retirement investments, etc). I have no sympathy for any politician who gets caught in the crossfire of our nations ire.
Re: somebody didn't get the memo!
When the 99% comes out again and the media wonders why they’re bombing shopping malls*, they’ll point to OWS and say Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.
Though it was said by (attributed to) JFK, I think it would sound just lovely in French. Non?
* Disclaimer to everyone, especially the NSA, I’m not, with a big emphasis on NOT, suggesting or endorsing that anyone actually bomb a shopping mall.
capital building, though…
Congress
techdirt's commenters.
I have seen more comments pretaining to actuality in a few minutes while reading Techdirts replies, than i have in ever sen before. The do good, but they still do not go to the real reason why this is happening. Enslavement is the intent, and with a world of HUTA (head up the ass) it will be achieved. Total enslavement leads to total destruction.
Congressmen & Senators
We Need term limits– 12 tears for senators & 8 years for representatives– If they can’t complete what they wanted to do in that time frame, they should quit anyway.
In addition all federal compensation and fringe benefits, stops upon termination, Reelection failure and or term limits.
These 40 years of service gravey trainers have to go
WHAT DO YOU EXPECT FROM A BUNCH OF CROOKS! RESPECT AS A CITIZEN??!! LOL
congress
cocksuckers
PLEASE PEOPLE - DO YOUR RESEARCH BEFORE SPREADING LIES
This is a complete lie and has been circling the internet and social media like a wirlwind. S 617 overview from Congress.gov says:
S 617 ?Nullifies the effectiveness of the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act of 2012 (STOCK Act) with respect to mandatory public, on-line financial disclosure reporting by congressional staff (except Members of Congress and congressional candidates) and executive branch officers and employees (except the President, the Vice President, and officers at levels I and II of the Executive Schedule who require nomination by the President and confirmation by the Senate).
Applies the financial disclosure reporting requirements and restrictions of the STOCK Act ONLY to Members of Congress, congressional candidates, the President, the Vice President, and executive branch officers at levels I and II of the Executive Schedule who require nomination by the President and confirmation by the Senate.
Extends the deadline until January 1, 2014 for:
?the Secretary, the Sergeant at Arms, and the Clerk to develop systems to enable the electronic filing of financial disclosure reports as well as their on-line public availability;
?the Director of the Office of Government Ethics to develop such systems for financial disclosure forms filed by covered executive branch officials.
Repeals: (1) the prohibition against requiring a login to search or sort the data contained in the publicly available financial disclosure systems, and (2) the requirement that a login protocol with the name of the user be utilized by a person downloading data contained in the reports.
http://beta.congress.gov/bill/113th-congress/senate-bill/716
There was no ban as yet, now there is, but if a person with a sensitive government job does insider trading in the future, it will now be against the law, but it cannot be published-this does beg the question, what’s different? But it is now illegal for legislators to do it.
Do as they Say... Not as "they" do!
I want to run for Congress if it means I can make millions from insider trading.
I want the most perfect health care money can buy.
I want to work for a few years and get retirement, pension, and all the bennies Congress gets.
I want to show up and argue my views and make people live how I want them to live.
And lastly…..I want to be able to make broken promises to get elected while actualy just jet setting the globe in luxery while the government is sound asleep, the people are in trouble and the future is in deep sh*t.
OUR CONGRESS IS CORRUPT
OBAMA PAST A BILL TO STOP INSIDER TRADING IN CONGRESS AND IN JUST A FEW MONTHS WENT BACKWARDS ON IT — I CONSIDER OUR CONGRESS USELESS TRASH — ANYONE OF THESE CONGRESSMAN THAT MAKES MONEY ON INSIDER TRADING WHILE MILLIONS IN THIS COUNTRY ARE LOSING THEIR HOMES AND STARVING SHOULD BE SHOT IN FRONT OF THE WHITE HOUSE — THE ARE PURE USELESS PIECES OF SHIT
Insider Trading by Congress
The country is lacking in jobs, real health care and steeped in poverty. Our Congress and Senate continue the practice of wealth by stealth. How low will you go before we are mired in muck by your greed? In the words of Rodney Dangerfield you get and deserve not respect. That is why most American are switching the party affiliation to independent. We will be shopping for a party that will represent the American people ?US and not your own pockets.
congressional insider trading
At what point are Americans going to stand up and take back
their country from the scumballs in Washington. More embarrassing than Congress being able to do things like insider trading while citizens are being sent to prison for the same offense, ie Martha Stewart, are the Americans that turn their heads and won’t be bothered because they are bought off cheaply with sports and beer. Reminds you of what we did to the Indians when we came to this country. You also have to wonder how paid off are the Federal and Supreme Courts that allow law after law to be passed that definitely violate numerous constitutional laws.
Re: congressional insider trading
So when are you going to stand up and take things back? And exactly how would that manifest?
A lot of people are pissed off, but no one wants to be the guy disappeared for sedition.
Only when people are so desperate that they don’t care anymore, only when the consequences of capture seem tolerable in comparison to their own state of life will people turn against the government.
And we still have no reason to expect the new boss won’t be the same as the old boss.
congressional insider trading
Let’ find out who these wonderful members of congress are and make sure they do not return to office for another term. In other words let’s vote everyone of them out of office.
Just lookup the voting record of your congressional representatives. If they voted in favor, send them a note telling them how you feel about it. Let them know you will be doing everything possible to get them voted out of office.
congress
The dam thieves, thay are more corrupt than the drug dealers on the streets of our great country.
Ultravires congress
Insider trading in 1787 would have been treason under the patriotic philosophy of constitutional creation, and rise to the level of bad behavior in office whether done by staffer or any other agent for Rep or Senator; staffers as employees have no exception as privilege against laws enforceable fo nongovernment. Unthinkable to allow congress to be made a form of private enterprise government.
Congress should be seeking consent by internet voting in order to vote, by voice, or as recorded now that two way internet communication is possible. The people have the capacity to have limited and enforceable powers of congress now, not the privileged royal and autonomous congress that it has evolved into. reign them into their original Constitutional form and function.
Congress
The reason we don’t trust them is they are constantly trying (and succeeding!) in doing things to enrich themselves and insulate themselves from the laws they impose on everyone else. It is done in secret of course making people think that if they are doing the things that are discovered by the press what else are they up to that hasn’t been discovered yet? We need to completely revamp Congress starting with term limits, at least a 5 year waiting period before a ex member of Congress can go to work as a lobbyist or have any other business relationship with the Government, change their pension and healthcare to be the same as any ordinary government employee, make any change to their salary and benefits open to public debate and approval and finally make public ALL legislation including a list of any and all “earmarks” or other add ons. We need the Congress to be subject to the checks and balances designed into the Constitution by the wise founding fathers who recognized that people in power without oversight will usually become corrupt. Since Congress is to represent the people let’s make them be like us not as millionaires in a private club.
Congress
The reason we don’t trust them is they are constantly trying (and succeeding!) in doing things to enrich themselves and insulate themselves from the laws they impose on everyone else. It is done in secret of course making people think that if they are doing the things that are discovered by the press what else are they up to that hasn’t been discovered yet? We need to completely revamp Congress starting with term limits, at least a 5 year waiting period before a ex member of Congress can go to work as a lobbyist or have any other business relationship with the Government, change their pension and healthcare to be the same as any ordinary government employee, make any change to their salary and benefits open to public debate and approval and finally make public ALL legislation including a list of any and all “earmarks” or other add ons. We need the Congress to be subject to the checks and balances designed into the Constitution by the wise founding fathers who recognized that people in power without oversight will usually become corrupt. Since Congress is to represent the people let’s make them be like us not as millionaires in a private club.
How were members of Congress exempt from the rule? Was there a special carve-out for Congress in the Insider Trading Act?
Who is policing the investments of the members of Congress?