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With Roger Sollenberger, Political Reporter

Pay Dirt is a weekly foray into the pigpen of political funding. Subscribehere to get it in your inbox every Thursday.

 

The Big Dig this week… Will Kevin McCarthy Claim the Stock Ban Win Pelosi Wouldn’t?

It was one of the more puzzling moves in recent political history. 

 

Instead of enacting a slam-dunk policy win supported by broad majorities of the public—a ban on members of Congress trading stocks—former Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and other Democratic leaders dragged their feet last year and ultimately did nothing.

 

With a Republican takeover of the House, most lawmakers thought their opportunity for action had passed. 

 

But not even six months into the new Congress, an unexpected thing has happened: a determined bipartisan coalition has used a fresh raft of suspiciously timed member stock trades to put renewed pressure on Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) to act.

Zom-bie, zom-bie, zom-bie, eeeh, eeeeh, eeeh

 

For a legislative effort that much of Capitol Hill had left for dead, there’s perhaps more energy behind it now than at any point in over a year.

 

While McCarthy hasn’t commented much publicly on a ban since winning the speakership—he actually leveraged the issue to needle Pelosi last year—there are promising signs of action. 

 

McCarthy’s office didn’t respond to a request for comment, but as bipartisan support continues to grow, key GOP lawmakers aren’t ruling out advancing a stock ban in the coming months.

 

Not my Steil

 

Rep. Bryan Steil (R-WI), who chairs the House Administration Committee with jurisdiction over the issue, told The Daily Beast on Wednesday that he’s “not taking anything off the table at this time.”

 

“There's a real opportunity for us to explore ways we can, at the end of the day, enhance voters’ confidence in what is taking place here on Capitol Hill,” Steil said.

 

Fitzmagic

 

Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA)—a top sponsor of one stock ban proposal—expressed optimism about getting something done this Congress.

 

“We're not getting any sharp pushback,” said Fitzpatrick, who co-chairs the centrist Problem Solvers Caucus. “It's more like the devil’s in the details kind of thing.”


Since January, the coalition of lawmakers supporting action has grown. From Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) to Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL), members across the political spectrum have signed onto bills to ban members trading stocks. 

 

Withdrawal slip

 

Part of the new energy is explained by a bonanza of suspiciously timed trading: in recent months, at least 10 members bought and sold shares of bank stocks around recent regional bank collapses, a subject on which federal officials and banking executives have briefed Congress.

 

“It’s just one after another,” Rep. Abigail Spanberger (D-VA), a sponsor of leading stock ban legislation, said of the most recent trading scandals. “Certainly, there have been a lot of conversations among colleagues about—yet again, we find ourselves in this place.”

The fact that lawmakers in either party would pass up an obvious political win—and an opportunity to restore trust in a deeply distrusted institution—remains baffling to many supporters of the stock bans. 

 

But despite that sense of incredulity growing among members and their constituents, the same factors that slowed stock legislation last year remain in this new Congress. 

 

Can we not?

 

Reluctance to curtail member stock trading is not, strictly speaking, partisan. Senior members in both parties don’t want to go through the hassle of reworking their stock portfolios. And many don’t respond well to the idea that they shouldn’t be able to supplement their government salaries with investments—above-board ones, of course.

 

Republicans, however, might be more philosophically disinclined toward the basic principle, which could be one of the biggest obstacles for supporters of a ban to navigate.

 

“I've got concerns, constitutional concerns, over that because the right to engage in commerce is an inherent part of the Constitution that belongs to everybody,” said Rep. Barry Loudermilk (R-GA), who sits on the Administration Committee.

 

Instead of passing a ban, Loudermilk said lawmakers could tighten disclosure requirements for stock activity. He also suggested there wasn’t much of a problem to begin with, given that members have been investigated and charged with insider trading before. That is true, though the vast majority of members who violate existing stock rules face no penalties.

 

The Senate also remains a challenge, where 60 votes are needed to pass legislation. Few Republicans in that chamber have lent their support to stock ban proposals. 

 

An object in motion…

 

But the House could drastically change that dynamic by passing a bill. The more immediate question for Republicans, and really for McCarthy, is whether the obvious political upside to moving a stock ban might one day overwhelm the clear inertia among members when it comes to regulating their own portfolios.

 

When he was the Minority Leader last year, McCarthy was happy to use the stock ban push to tweak his nemesis Pelosi, who was always chilly toward the idea and ultimately slow-walked it until the clock ran out. 

 

Like many Republicans, McCarthy claimed prolific stock trading by Pelosi’s husband was the reason she stifled the bills. But in doing so, he seemed to occasionally endorse the idea behind them: last July, for instance, he told reporters, “I think we need to bring trust back to this institution.”

 

An object at rest…

 

In the 2022 election that handed the GOP a House majority, many Democrats wished they could have campaigned on telling voters they had finally put an end to stock scandals. By leaving the issue on the table, however, they’ve given McCarthy—a political creature known for devouring polls and campaign strategy memos—something to pick up.

 

Asked if Republicans recognize the political rewards at play, Fitzpatrick—who has won a number of tough races himself—had a quick response.

“I do,” he said. “I put it on every single letter.”

 

Democrats, like Spanberger, who all but begged their leadership to take the win last year, believe that McCarthy is hardly incapable of recognizing one.

 

Good politics

 

“I’m never going to give Speaker McCarthy advice on how he could perhaps charge his own path and differentiate himself from predecessors,” Spanberger said, perhaps an implicit nod to Pelosi.

 

“But the politics on this are phenomenally good,” she continued. “He’s said all the things one would want to hear him say—now he has to bring it.”

 

Good government 

 

Steil, the GOP chairman with jurisdiction on the issue, said he is weighing various proposals before deciding what, if any, bill to formally consider. Notably, members from both parties have signed on to competing bills that offer slightly different solutions. 

 

The bill with the broadest support is the TRUST In Congress Act, which has been introduced in the past three congresses by Spanberger and Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX). It currently has some 55 cosponsors, ranging from the far right to the progressive left, powerful senior members to new freshmen.

 

The legislation would require members, their spouses, and their dependent children to either sell their individual stocks, or put them in a qualified blind trust while serving in office.

 

I’ll take…Business ETHICS

 

Another main proposal is the ETHICS Act, which is being led by Fitzpatrick, as well as Reps. Michael Cloud (R-TX) and Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL), and has cosponsors like Ocasio-Cortez. That bill aims to offer lawmakers more options for where they can park their investment assets during their time in Congress.

 

The fact that lawmakers would have to smooth out those differences deepens the challenge. Indeed, that was largely the dynamic that helped Pelosi and her allies draw out the legislative process last year, claiming supporters of the bans needed to get on the same page.

 

Still, even Republicans who have not signed onto any specific proposal are sharing the general sentiment that doing something would be preferable to doing nothing. 

 

Bringing home the bacon

 

Rep. Don Bacon (R-NE), a leading GOP moderate, said he was “generally supportive” of the idea and would be inclined to vote in favor of a bill.

 

Being able to trade stocks as a member of Congress, Bacon said, “just leaves you open for speculation, even if you have no malice or wrong intent.”

 

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From Roger’s Notebook...

Picking the Ron horse. On Monday, the day before a heated primary for governor in Kentucky, GOP candidate Kelly Craft got an unexpected endorsement: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. A wealthy megadonor who served as Trump’s second U.N. ambassador, Craft was squaring off against Attorney General Daniel Cameron—who ran with the endorsement of Trump himself. 

 

The eleventh-hour announcement from DeSantis was greeted with some confusion, even though it didn’t matter much; in Tuesday’s election, Cameron won easily, some 30 points ahead of Craft, who placed third.

 

In the aftermath, however, some observers have begun to connect the dots, namely, one big dot: Jeff Roe, the GOP super-consultant, whose firm Axiom Strategies counts both Craft and DeSantis as clients. It’s not uncommon for endorsements to flow between politicians who share a consultant, but this one may come at a price. Trump’s camp quickly seized on the nod this week, and Craft’s subsequent blowout, as proof that DeSantis is “subservient” to his consultants.

 

In a McClatchy report on those ties, one GOP strategist said the DeSantis endorsement was a “totally stupid pay to play move by her consultants.”

 

Small dollar state of mind. New York lawmakers adopted their state budget earlier this month, and among the $229 billion spending blueprint is a $40 million line-item that could have massive implications for future elections: a small dollar matching funds program.

 

A Brennan Center for Justice study from January noted that the 200 biggest donors in New York contributed more to 2022 candidates—nearly $16 million—than every donor combined who contributed less than $250. That was 200 people in New York giving more than 200,000 donors. 

 

The Brennan Center estimated that, had the matching funds program been active in 2022, “the financial power of small donors could have increased sixfold, from 11 percent to as much as 67 percent.”

 

The program will match $6 for every $1 of donations up to $250. That means a $250 donation in a New York statewide race would become a $1,750 donation. And even though the $40 million program is relatively miniscule, it could prove to be an important step for amplifying certain candidates who rely on small donors. 

 

Not ready for Ron. A pro-DeSantis super PAC's attempts to share a list of phone numbers and email addresses with the Florida governor and presumed 2024 presidential contender was shot down by the D.C. district court yesterday.

 

The super PAC, “Ready for Ron,” actually devised a pretty clever way of trying to share this information with DeSantis; it tried to claim the emails and phone numbers were part of a “petition” trying to convince DeSantis to run. 

 

Before it went ahead with its plan, the super PAC asked the FEC if it was allowed to deliver the petition—complete with contact information that DeSantis could presumably fundraise from—to the prospective 2024 candidate. But the FEC mostly rejected the plan, noting that sharing the list would be an in-kind donation in excess of federal limits. 

 

Ready for Ron appealed that FEC decision to the D.C. court, arguing this was a violation of its First Amendment rights of speech. But the court found that this gambit of collecting information under “the guise of a petition,” just to hand it over to DeSantis, didn’t appear to be a free speech issue.

 

Still, the FEC didn't answer Ready for Ron's question of whether they could deliver this petition before DeSantis officially enters the "testing the water" phase, meaning the super PAC could still possibly turn over the contact information—and risk enforcement action by the FEC.

 

More From The Beast’s Politics Desk

Matt Gaetz

She’s running. Sam Brodey had an excellent piece looking at how Sen. Kyrsten Sinema has been scheduling fundraisers around marathon trips, technically allowing her to charge her entire itinerary to her campaign. Experts noted that, if she’s not breaking the letter of the law, she’s certainly violating the spirit of it. 

 

George Santos, the political consultant wunderkind. Will Bredderman also broke some major news on the George Santos front today, revealing that Santos’ fellow GOP candidates were actually the first targets of the congressman’s alleged con. Santos’ company, Redstone Strategies, appears to have bilked candidates for shoddy services, with one candidate in particular claiming to The Daily Beast that he was ripped off. 


The return of Teflon Don. Jake Lahut went deep on how Trump is managing to swat away major scandals in the course of a day—so much so that his scandals have become part of his draw for GOP voters. Naturally, this presents a big challenge to the Republicans running against Trump for the nomination, and a big opportunity for the Democrats waiting for Trump in the general. 

 

We'll be back next week with more Pay Dirt.  Have a tip? Send us a note and subscribe here.

 
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