Nancy Pelosi’s long career in Washington has come under fresh scrutiny following a New York Post report detailing her extraordinary investment returns. Over 37 years in Congress, Pelosi turned a starting net worth of around $3 million into more than $280 million today, with stock profits amounting to $130 million. That equates to a 16,930% return on her investments, far outpacing the Dow Jones Industrial Average’s 2,300% growth over the same timeframe.
The timing of these revelations coincides with Pelosi’s announcement last week that she will not seek reelection in 2026, wrapping up nearly four decades representing California’s 11th district. Critics point to her trades as prime examples of how lawmakers can leverage privileged information from closed-door briefings and committee work to gain an edge unavailable to ordinary investors. For instance, her husband’s well-timed options trades in tech giants like Nvidia and Google have raised eyebrows, especially given her role in shaping policies that affect those sectors.
Florida Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, appearing on Fox Business with Larry Kudlow, laid out the case plainly during a recent interview. She described pushing for a outright ban on individual stock trading by members of Congress, their spouses, and dependent children. “Most members are making 600% returns after they’re aware of the market shifts,” Luna said in the clip. She added, “If you want to trade stocks, go to Wall Street, but don’t do it in Congress.”
With the proposed legislation, it won’t just be members of Congress blocked from trading individual stocks but their spouses as well. If it passes (and it should), those who really want to bypass it will just bring in an uncle or distant cousin to make their trades, but the bulk of the problem will likely be fixed based on the added scrutiny.
Luna’s post on X sharing the interview drove the point home: “A 17,000% profit return on stocks is statistically impossible, unless you are a member of Congress with access to inside info. Funny enough, the only people against banning stock trading for Congress are those within the institution.”
Kudlow displayed graphics of Pelosi’s gains, noting they exceed what even Warren Buffett could achieve fairly.
This isn’t new territory—sites like Unusual Whales have tracked congressional trades for years, showing patterns where lawmakers buy into industries just before favorable legislation passes or sell ahead of downturns. Yet enforcement remains lax under the STOCK Act of 2012, which requires disclosure but doesn’t prohibit trading.
Luna’s bill aims to close that gap, with a discharge petition ready if leadership drags its feet. She mentioned hearing tips that some in Congress plan to “slow walk” the measure, suggesting resistance from those benefiting most.
Such practices feed into deeper suspicions about a two-tiered system in Washington, where elites enrich themselves while everyday Americans face market risks without the same intel. Reports from Fox News confirm Pelosi’s profits hit $130 million, a figure that dwarfs her congressional salary of about $174,000 annually. If anything, these numbers explain the erosion of faith in institutions: why should voters trust a body that allows its members to play the markets with an unfair hand?
As Republicans control the House and White House under President Trump, momentum could build for reforms like Luna’s. Bipartisan support exists among the public—polls show over 80% favor banning congressional stock trading—but insiders have stalled similar efforts before. Whether this time proves different remains to be seen, but Pelosi’s exit amid these disclosures only amplifies the call for change.

I guess she gets to keep her millions. But everyone else…..screw you. You’re not an elite.
Standard reply they like but mine made more sense and no profanity but had no GUTS to print it.