In his State of the Union address, President Obama urged lawmakers to reduce the “deficit of trust” between Washington and the rest of the country, in part through a series of institutional reforms. At the top of the list: banning insider trading by members of Congress and limiting elected officials “from owning stocks in industries they impact.”
Those are two related ideas, but they’re not quite identical. The “STOCK Act” is already pending in the Senate, and it’s a companion measure to a House bill intended to restrict insider trading on Capitol Hill. But Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) told Greg Sargent today about a plan to expand the legislation considerably.
Senator Brown tells me he is introducing a measure in the Senate today that would require all Senators to divest themselves of any stocks in companies that are impacted by their actions as a Senator. The idea is that members of Congress — who are suffering historically low approval ratings while enjoying historically high levels of personal wealth — have some work to do in building confidence that the institution is representing the public interest, rather than the interests of the wealthy and well-connected, some of whom are, well, them. […]









