Uncover how politicians invest.
FinePrint Data Articles
Data highlights and analysis to help you get to the root of what's actually going on in the world of politics.
- All
- Congress
- Issues & Ideas
- Research & Data
- Supreme Court
- Uncategorized
Private Prisons Hide In Politicians’ Stock Holdings
Congresspersons who would never take campaign endorsements from private prison companies nonetheless own stock in these companies indirectly through pooled investment funds.
Guidebook to US-City Financial Disclosures
Personal financial disclosures for cities vary widely and often provide minimal information. This report indexes disclosure resources.
#2: Who Day Trades in DC?
While most politicians seem to be long-term investors, some take a more active role in managing their portfolios. By sheer number of trades, here’s the investment accounts that see the most activity.
PI-1: Which Politicians Are Rich?
Among the Biden administration’s senior staff, Senators and Representatives in Congress, and the nine Supreme Court Justices – here’s who’s got the most and the least in their piggy bank.
Lawmakers Punish MLB but Invest in Other Boycotted Firms
Co-sponsors of the Antitrust bills meant to punish The Major League Baseball (MLB) still own their stock in other companies targeted by the GOP boycott of corporate responses to the Georgia voting bill, SB202.
Republicans Still Own Stock in GOP-Boycott Targets
Despite sharing Trump’s boycott rhetoric, GOP lawmakers Mo Brooks’s (R-AL, 5th), Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA, 14th) and John Rutherford (R-FL, 4th) still hold stock in companies the former President has called to boycott for being “woke.”