Gee, look at that: Nancy and Paul Pelosi had yet another “lucky” year on the stock market in 2024. What will it take for Congress to crack down on its members’ insider trading?
New required disclosures show the former House speaker and her hubby raked in $7.8 million to $42.5 million last year, bumping their estimated net worth to as much $413 million. (The law doesn’t make them share exact numbers.)
And a good chunk of that eye-popping wealth comes from their impressive stock portfolio, which is so consistently lucrative that entire social-media accounts are dedicated to tracking the Pelosis’ buys and sells.
Nancy maintains that she owns no stocks (it’s all hubby Paul) and (says a mouthpiece) she “has no prior knowledge or subsequent involvement in any transactions.”
Which, even if she said that herself, under oath, leaves plenty of room for Paul to trade on the basis of inside information — whether things she learns on the job, or info fed to either of them for favors past, present or future from the ex-speaker.
Certainly, Paul has made some uncannily sharp moves in the markets.
In fact, his portfolio outperformed every major hedge fund last year.
In July, he sold 5,000 shares of Microsoft, months before the Federal Trade Commission announced an antitrust investigation into the company.
And he dumped 2,000 Visa shares months before the Justice Department sued the company for allegedly monopolizing the debit-card market.
Get opinions and commentary from our columnists
Subscribe to our daily Post Opinion newsletter!
Thanks for signing up!
If he were an average Joe, the Securities and Exchange Commission would be picking through his records with a fine-tooth comb — because that kind of foresight reeks of insider knowledge.
Fine; maybe Paul is a modern-day Nostradamus, somehow working his market magic without the least bit of impropriety.
But it sure is fishy for any top official’s family member to pull in millions this way, year after year after year.
We doubt hard proof will ever come to light; the Pelosis are far too smart to leave a clear trail.
But they’re only the most notable examples of this game: Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle regularly make good money off the market; the portfolios of dozens of Democrats and Republicans in Congress beat the S&P 500 in 2024, according to watchdog Unusual Whales.
Maybe they’re just really good at making trades — but the simple fact is that neither the House nor Senate does anything serious to prevent such abuse of privileged information.
Even if all (or the majority) don’t use that knowledge, allowing them to make trades offers too many opportunities for corruption.
And when they keep scoring big on market bets for decades, a la the Pelosis, it reeks.
House Speaker Mike Johnson and Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries have both signaled they would support a ban on congressional stock trading — the kind that Nancy blocked repeatedly as speaker.
Getting that passed before next year’s midterms should be a priority for Republicans — clear proof that they want to clean up Congress.
If a career in the House no longer makes it easy to get rich, the next potential Pelosi might just go into an entirely different line of work.