WASHINGTON
(AP) -- Congress is rushing to make it absolutely clear to everyone that its
members are banned from insider stock trading, hoping to improve their sagging
image that has approval ratings at historic lows.
Senators
made the first move Monday. Their 93-2 procedural vote cleared the way for
Senate passage - possibly later this week - of a bill that would require
disclosure of stock transactions within 30 days and explicitly prohibit members
of Congress from initiating trades based on non-public information they
acquired in their official capacity. The legislation, at least partly symbolic
in nature, is aimed at answering critics who say lawmakers profit from
businesses where they have special knowledge.
U.S.
lawmakers already are subject to the same penalties as other investors who use
non-public information to enrich themselves, though no member of Congress in
recent memory has been charged with insider trading. In 2005, the Securities
and Exchange Commission and Justice Department investigated then-Senate
Majority Leader Bill Frist's sale of stock in his family's hospital company,
but no charges were ever brought against the Tennessee Republican.
Voters may
believe lawmakers paid an annual salary of $174,000 are enriching themselves by
making investments based on what they learn in Congress. A recent segment of
CBS' "60 Minutes" in November questioned trades by a House committee
chairman, the current speaker and his predecessor's husband. Speaker John
Boehner, former Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Rep. Spencer Bachus, R-Ala., all
denied wrongdoing. Bachus chairs the Financial Services Committee.
"Members
of Congress are not above the law," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said
before Monday's test vote. "We must play by the same rules every other
American plays by." He said the bill "will clear up any perception
that it's acceptable for members of Congress to profit from insider
trading."
A recent
Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll of registered voters found 56 percent favored
replacing the entire 535-member Congress. Other polls this year have given
Congress an approval rating between 11 percent and 13 percent, while
disapproval percentages have ranged from 79 percent to 86 percent.
Joseph
Lieberman, I-Conn. said, "The numbers of people who have a favorable
impression of this body are so low that we're down to close relatives and paid
staff. And I'm not so sure about the paid staff."
Said Sen.
Scott Brown, R-Mass., one of the bill's authors: "Beginning today, the
Senate is embarking on a mission to help address the deficit of trust with the
American people."
The bill is
entitled the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act. President
Barack Obama endorsed it in his State of the Union speech last week and also
raised the issue in his radio and Internet address Saturday.
The White
House said Monday in a statement, "The administration believes this
bipartisan legislation is an important first step to prevent members of
Congress from profiting from their positions and calls for swift passage."
The Senate
bill would prohibit lawmakers from tipping off family members or others about
non-public information that could influence a stock's price, in addition to the
explicit ban itself, and would require members to disclose stock transactions
within 30 days. And it would direct the House and Senate ethics committees to
write rules that would make insider trading violators subject to congressional
punishment.
Other
legislative branch employees also would be subject to the ban, but only those
who are required to file annual financial disclosure statements would be
subject to the reporting requirement. For 2012, employees making $119,554 or
more are required to file disclosure statements..
House
leaders hope to pass their version of the bill by the end of February, and
Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., said he wants to expand the legislation to
include land deals and other transactions.
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