Congress passed the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act (STOCK Act) in 2012, following more than 10 years of allegations of insider trading by members of Congress and staff. Initially introduced in 2006, Rep. Louise Slaughter (D-NY) and Rep. Brian Baird (D-WA) drafted the STOCK Act in response to insider trading allegations against Tony Rudy, a top aide to the onetime House Majority Leader Rep. Tom DeLay, as well as an insider trading scandal faced by Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist in 2005. Critics argue that The STOCK Act has failed to achieve its goal of penalizing members for…
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Response rates from 270 Congressional District 10 voters.
23% Yes |
77% No |
14% Yes |
66% No |
6% Yes, but with strict protections against insider trading |
7% No, and do more to prevent insider trading by their friends and family |
3% Yes, as long as their trades are publicly reported in real time |
4% No, and their investments should be held in a blind trust |
Trend of support over time for each answer from 270 Congressional District 10 voters.
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Trend of how important this issue is for 270 Congressional District 10 voters.
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Unique answers from Congressional District 10 voters whose views went beyond the provided options.
@9G3DHMG1yr1Y
No, and their investments should be held in a blind trust as well as doing more to prevent insider trading by their friends and family.
@9GTY55Z1yr1Y
No, and their investments should be held in a blind trust and do more to prevent insider trading by their family and friends, such as all family members must report their trades in real time.
@9RHYD7S5mos5MO
Yes, insider trading has nothing to do with one’s ability or trustworthiness to fulfill their office duties
@9GW5QNG1yr1Y
No, their investments should be held in a blind trust; and do more to prevent insider trading by their friends and family.
@9J4BFZW11mos11MO
No, their investments should be held in a blind trust and more should be done to prevent insider trading by their family, friends and coworkers
@9SBW6KC4mos4MO
No, and their investments should be held in a blind trust, and do more to prevent insider trading by their friends and family
@96T2WVQ2yrs2Y
Yes, but with strict protections against insider trading and their investments should be held in a blind trust UNTIL they are NO LONGER IN OFFICE. This could be considered INSIDER TRADING otherwise.
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