Last week, by a vote of 96 to 3, the Senate approved legislation to prohibit lawmakers from engaging in insider trading. It wasn’t as strong a bill as it could have been, but the bill, known as the STOCK Act, wasn’t a bad effort.
There is, however, another chamber in Congress.
Lobbyists were in a tizzy on Tuesday over provisions of a Senate-passed ethics bill that tighten regulation of lobbying and require secretive “political intelligence” firms to register in the same way as lobbyists.
House Republicans and their floor leader, Representative Eric Cantor of Virginia, said they would amend the bill, going to the House floor this week, to strengthen it.
But Representative Louise M. Slaughter, Democrat of New York, said, “I think ‘strengthening’ here is a euphemism for ‘weakening.’ “
To a certain extent, this isn’t new.. When Congress worked on a jobs bill in 2010, Boehner and congressional Republicans huddled with corporate lobbyists. When work on Wall Street reform got underway, Boehner and congressional Republicans huddled with industry lobbyists. When Congress worked on health care reform, Boehner and congressional Republicans huddled with insurance lobbyists. When an energy/climate bill started advancing, Republicans huddled with energy lobbyists.
It’s not exactly a surprise, then, that GOP leaders would coordinate with lobbyists on insider trading.
What is surprising, at least a little, is that even Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) has accused his Republican counterparts in the House “of doing the bidding of Wall Street by removing a provision … that would have required political intelligence firms to register in a similar fashion to lobbyists.”
From The Hill’s report:
The version of the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act unveiled by House Republicans Tuesday evening contains weakened restrictions on the growing industry, in which companies market private congressional information to firms looking to make financial trades. The House bill simply requires a report on the industry.








