Many United States lawmakers from both sides of the aisle have at one point expressed support for legislation banning members from investing in stocks or crypto — an initiative the 118th Congress could address following a shift in leadership.
Beginning on Jan. 3 as the next session of the U.S. Congress opens, Republicans will take control of the House of Representatives with a slim majority following the 2022 Midterms, while Democrats will maintain a majority in the Senate. Kevin McCarthy, a Republican representative in contention to be the next Speaker of the House, reportedly said in January 2022 he would consider an outright ban on lawmakers holding and trading stocks — a measure which presumably could extend to crypto — should his party flip the chamber.
It’s unclear at the time of publication whether McCarthy has the votes to assume leadership of the House — a process which will likely begin starting Jan. 3. However, many have pointed to elected officials being allowed to trade and hold certain assets while in office as a potential conflict of interest.
Members of Congress should not own or trade individual stocks. And neither should their spouses.
In the 117th session of Congress, a 77 lawmakers reportedly violated disclosure requirements under the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act, or STOCK Act, first passed in 2012. These violations included delayed reporting of allowable trades, but members were still permitted to handle legislation on matters which could have been influenced by their own investments.
For example, pro-crypto Senator Cynthia Lummis, who sits on the Senate Agriculture Committee and oversees hearings concerning the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, has disclosed investments in Bitcoin
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