congressional secrets more important to the safety and security of our nation? Such secrets are important only to the safety and security of our politicians. We should apply the Freedom of Information Act to Congress members and congressional committees.
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Grants, Loans, and Insider Deals
As we have seen, when the federal government hands out billions of dollars in cash, there is often little transparency in the process. Corporations and nonprofit organizations keep records of major financial decisions. They also establish policies to protect against cronyism. When a compensation committee meets, for example, as a rule there can be no direct financial ties between any member and the company's CEO, and the committee must keep records of its votes and decisions. But at the federal level, when a $150 million guaranteed loan is offered, the process includes little transparency and no clearly established standards. Presidents should not be able to steer billions of dollars in taxpayer money to their friends, campaign fundraisers, and cronies, disguised as some so-called social good.
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Breaking the Cycle of Crony Capitalism
Here are some initiatives that we must undertake to break the cycle of crony capitalism:
Create a legal code that makes trading on nonpublic government information illegal both for those who pass the information and for those who trade on it. This is the standard in Europe, and it makes sense. But we need to be realistic and assume that the SEC will be a reluctant enforcer, so we will need to put additional checks in place.
Corporate insiders trading their own company's stock are required to disclose these transactions to the SEC within two days. Why not apply the same standard to Congress? Members should disclose all transactions above, say, $5,000 within two days. The disclosure should be detailed, including the price and number of shares, and then placed online in a database. That will make potential insider trades easier to identify.
Members of Congress should not be allowed to trade stock in companies that are overseen by their committees. If you sit on the Senate Banking Committee, for example, you should not be allowed to trade bank stocks. If you serve on the Senate Armed Services Committee, you should not be able to buy and sell defense stocks. Does your subcommittee deal with health issues? No pharma stock. This is the area where insider trading is most likely to occur, and where lawmakers are most likely to obtain market-moving information from which they or their friends can profit.
Apply whistleblower laws to Congress. If it's good enough for federal workers and corporate employees, it should be good enough for Congress. We should encourage congressional staffers, when they see financial irregularities like insider trading, to report them. But they will report them only if they know they will be protected from retaliation. They should be afforded that protection.
Disallow "sweetheart" IPOs. One of the fastest ways for a member to make a quick buck is through an IPO. You can't legally hand a congressman $10,000 in cash, but you can arrange for him to participate in a lucrative IPO that is worth far more. "Special-friend" IPOs should be disallowed. Unless the initial public offering goes through a public auction, in which people can openly compete for shares in a bidding contest, members of Congress should not be allowed to participate.
Review, revise, and enforce existing conflict-of-interest laws. Restricting stock trades based on committee assignments is a start, but not an end. Another possible way to avoid conflicts of interest would be for members either to abstain from voting when a conflict exists or to place their assets in mutual funds rather than individual stocks. Also, enforce the conflict-of-interest laws for senior White House officials and political appointees. Cronyism is cronyism, and political appointees should not be allowed to steer taxpayer money to former employees or