[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 175 (Wednesday, November 16, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H7631-H7632]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE STOCK ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Minnesota (Mr. Walz) for 5 minutes.
Mr. WALZ of Minnesota. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to urge and implore
my colleagues to support the STOCK Act, the Stop Trading on
Congressional Knowledge Act, and I ask also that Speaker Boehner bring
this bill to the floor for a vote immediately.
On Sunday night on CBS, their news program ``60 Minutes'' highlighted
the potential problem of insider trading on Capitol Hill. Unlike all
other Americans and investors, Members of Congress and their staff are
not held legally responsible for profiting from nonpublic information
they gain from their official position serving the public. This is
absolutely outrageous and strikes at the heart of the democracy.
When I first came to Congress and sat down with the author of this
bill originally, Congressman Baird, and he started explaining to me
what this was about, I, as most Americans, was shocked to believe it
wasn't already a bill. Why would you allow the breach of trust of the
American public to believe that their Member of Congress could
potentially be trading on information to enrich themselves? It's not
the point of, is it happening? The point is if the potential lies
there.
At the heart of every relationship is trust. If the trust is
violated, everything that comes after that is a moot point. And this
might be the greatest understatement ever: the American public is
understandably frustrated with all the bickering and gridlock here.
They don't trust institutions, they don't trust their banker, they
don't trust corporations, and they don't trust Congress. If you thought
we couldn't go any lower than a 9 percent approval rating, just have
the people who watch ``60 Minutes'' vote now and see where they're at.
This legislation is a very big step in the right direction. It's
about restoring the faith and trust in Congress and the work of
democracy. Ronald Reagan was right. We've heard about President Reagan
several times today. Trust but verify. That's what this piece of
legislation is about. We want to work with Speaker Boehner and get this
bill moving. And let me tell you, it's very simple on what it does. The
bill would prohibit insider trading on Capitol Hill. It will remove
loopholes and any confusion about what's right, wrong, legal or
illegal. No insider trading by Members of Congress and their staff,
period. If you do it, you break the law and you will be held
accountable. It's common sense.
The STOCK Act would prohibit Members of Congress and Congressional
staff from using nonpublic information obtained through their official
duties for personal gain in the stocks in the commodities markets. It
would also prohibit private individuals and firms who attempt to mine
such information from public officials to use it for insider trading.
Specifically, the bill is simple and short and says this: It requires
that the SEC and the CFTC write rules that ban using congressional,
nonpublic information to make trades. It changes the House ethics rules
to specifically ban Members and staff from using nonpublic information
to make trades. It changes House disclosure rules to require Members
and staff who already file financial disclosures to disclose trades of
$1,000 or more in a timely fashion, in addition to the annual
disclosures. And it requires political intelligence firms to register
like lobbyists. These are the people
[[Page H7632]]
who come to the Hill and use their connections to talk to people, try
and understand what piece of legislation is moving, what's the
potential for a potential government contract, and then they go back
and sell the information that's given to investors.
That breach of trust, that potential to undermine our financial
systems, is a cancer on the system. It weighs on the American public's
trust of their finance, of corporations, of Congress and undermines the
democracy. These people can still come here but register just like
lobbyists.
Let's make sure that transparency and the disinfectant of sunshine
shines on this. There is no room in this institution for even the
perception of wrongdoing. Every Member of Congress must be held to a
higher standard. It doesn't infringe upon their rights to legally
trade, it doesn't infringe upon their rights--their American rights--to
work hard, be smart, make good investments, and profit from that. What
it does prohibit is an unfair playing field that penalizes those that
play by the rules. And like so many of my colleagues and millions of
middle class Americans, I myself am a public school teacher. I spent 24
years in the National Guard. I tried to do what was right by my family
and my neighbors. I tried to play by the rules, with the great
understanding that the American Dream was you play by the rules, you
work hard, and you will benefit from that.
This piece of legislation ensures that the American people know that
we, as their representatives in this sacred House of the people, are
playing by the exact same rules, not worrying about enriching
ourselves, not worrying about gaming the system, and making sure that
their needs are put first. And as I said, it's not whether it happens
or not, it's whether the perception is there. I urge my colleagues and
Speaker Boehner, move this to the floor and let's vote for it.
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