Senators Mike Rounds, Shelley Moore Capito, Roy Blunt, John Hoeven, Jim Inhofe, Joe Manchin and Steve Daines in 2015. Senators are far wealthier than most constituents, and in a prime position to increase wealth via policymaking. Photograph: Tom Williams/Getty Images
Analysis of financial disclosure data shows 51 senators and their spouses have as much as $96m invested in corporate stocks
As they set national policy on important issues such as climate change, tech monopolies, medical debt and income inequality, US senators have glaring conflicts of interest, an investigation by news website Sludge and the Guardian can reveal.
An analysis of personal financial disclosure data as of 16 August has found that 51 senators and their spouses have as much as $96m personally invested in corporate stocks in five key sectors: communications/electronics; defense; energy and natural resources; finance, insurance and real estate; and health.
The majority of these stocks come from public companies, and some are private.
Overall, the senators are invested in 338 companies – including tech firms such as Apple and Microsoft, oil and gas giants including ExxonMobil and Antero Midstream, telecom companies including Verizon, and major defense contractors such as Boeing – in the five sectors as categorized by Sludge.
An analysis of personal financial disclosure data has shown that many US senators own millions of dollars in corporate stocks
Top 10 public companies invested by US senators, assuming maximum investment
Republicans
Democrats
Independents
0
500k
1m
1.5m
2m
2.5m
3m
Wireless Telecom Group
Apple
Microsoft
Alphabet
Wells Fargo
Berkshire Hathaway
Amazon
Empire State Realty Trust
Crown Castle International Corp.
Visa
Cisco
https://www.foxnews.com/media/former-nfl-player-marine-jeremy-staat-kaepernick-disgrace?fbclid=IwAR2xsc_vgX8h2P7qXPZe-yzkwWeYajI4dcrIT2lCkirZtWax2_g5hZiCWn8
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2019/12/01/terrorists-should-not-forced-serve-full-sentence-prison-jeremy/?WT.mc_id=tmgoff_hootsuite&
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