There’s A Sick Connection Between Lawmakers And The Vaccine Companies!
It cannot be a surprise that the COVID-19 pandemic made a lot of people BIG money.
Now, of course, it goes without saying that the big pharma companies raked in all kinds of dough, but Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson are not the only ones who benefitted from this crisis.
All the companies that made the PCR tests, personal protective equipment, and of course, those you manufactured over-the-counter drug medication all raked in the cha-ching.
While that seems to go without saying there are numerous United States lawmakers who also increased the size of their wallets.
Business Insider decided to conduct an investigation to find out which lawmakers have conflicts of interest between their personal finances and public duties.
After analyzing financial-disclosure reports and conducting interviews, Business Insider found dozens of federal lawmakers and 182 top staffers violated a conflict-of-interest law.
It seems to me that lawmakers should not be benefitting from this illness and also make laws or support mandates that would continue to increase the size of their portfolios, right?
That is just a HUGE CONFLICT OF INTEREST and CORRUPT!
Business Insider had the report:
In 2020, at least 13 senators and 35 US representatives held shares of Johnson & Johnson, the medical behemoth that produced the single-shot COVID-19 vaccine that more than 15 million Americans have received.
At least 11 senators and 34 representatives also held shares in 2020 of another COVID-19 vaccine manufacturer, Pfizer. Two representatives or their spouses held shares of Moderna during the same year that the world went on lockdown in response to the pandemic.
Lawmakers held these investments in COVID-19-minded companies as Congress was at the center of pandemic relief efforts. In 2020 and 2021, members of Congress voted on six relief bills together worth nearly $6 trillion. Congress also authorized more than $10 billion to help drug companies develop and distribute vaccines and forced health insurers to cover the cost of getting the shot.
Pharmaceutical companies involved with manufacturing COVID-19 injections and medications spent substantial amounts of money lobbying D.C. politicians.
Open Secrets reported the following figures:
- Pfizer – $7,270,000
- Johnson & Johnson – $7,090,000
- Gilead Sciences – $6,200,000
- AstraZeneca PLC – $2,890,000
- Regeneron Pharmaceuticals – $1,000,000
- Moderna Inc – $420,000
Business Insider weighed in on investments made by lawmakers:
The investors in vaccines included freshman Rep. Marie Newman, a Democrat of Illinois, whose husband, Jim Newman, has traded shares of both Johnson & Johnson and Moderna. The congresswoman’s 2020 annual personal financial disclosure also listed the couple together holding shares in Moderna.
Marie Newman’s office previously told Insider that Jim Newman controlled these finances and that the accounts were for retirement, college savings for their children, and assistance for family healthcare costs. Mary Newman entered Congress in 2021, after it had passed all but one federal relief bill. Her husband continued trading after she was sworn in.
Rep. Josh Gottheimer, a Democrat of New Jersey, was the only other lawmaker who held Moderna stock. In May 2020, he sold up to $15,000 worth of his shares.
In early January 2020, a share of Moderna traded below $20. As the pandemic took hold, the stock’s value grew exponentially. Moderna peaked in September 2021 at more than $455 a share. After dropping steadily through the autumn, it began rising again in late November. By early December, a share of Moderna traded above $280.
Even some Republican lawmakers who vocally opposed COVID-19 vaccine mandates also invested in vaccine manufacturers.
Vivien Scott, the wife of Rep. Austin Scott, a Republican of Georgia, traded up to $50,000 worth of Johnson & Johnson stock on two occasions this year. Austin Scott has bashed President Joe Biden’s workplace vaccine mandates but stressed that he supports vaccines, particularly given that he had COVID-19 in 2020 and spent several days in the hospital on oxygen.
“Congressman Scott and his wife own stocks like millions of American families do, and they follow all laws on trading,” Scott’s spokeswoman, Rachel Ledbetter, told Insider.
Republican Rep. Mo Brooks of Alabama sold up to $50,000 worth of Pfizer stock in August 2021 and then was nearly a month late filing his disclosure. Brooks, an unabashedly pro-Trump lawmaker who is running for a US Senate seat, previously accused the pharmaceutical giant of playing politics with the timing of its announcement about vaccine-efficacy data.
Martha Brooks, the congressman’s wife, told Insider that she handled all the family’s stock investments and used an investment broker to conduct these transactions. She acknowledged that she disclosed the stock transaction late.
Both Democrats and Republicans also sold stocks in companies that distribute personal protective equipment and manufacture COVID-19 testing supplies.
Cont. from Business Insider:
Rep. John Yarmuth, a Democrat of Kentucky who chairs the House Budget Committee, sold up to $15,000 worth of stock in 3M, which creates and distributes personal protective equipment such as N95 masks, at the end of March 2020.
cont.
Democratic Rep. Earl Blumenauer of Oregon reported that his wife, Margaret Kirkpatrick, bought up to $15,000 worth of stock in Quest Diagnostics, a leading COVID-19 test provider, in March 2020. Blumenauer did not respond to repeated requests for comment about his financial filings.
Democratic Rep. Don Beyer of Virginia reported buying up to $15,000 worth of Regeneron Pharmaceuticals stock in May 2020 through a jointly held account. He sold up to $30,000 worth of the stock between July and August 2020 through a jointly held account.
cont.
Sen. Tommy Tuberville, a freshman Republican of Alabama, has invested in Johnson & Johnson, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, and 3M.
cont.
In July 2020, Republican Rep. Carol Miller of West Virginia reported that her husband, Matt Miller, had bought up to $50,000 worth of shares of Abbott Laboratories, a COVID-19 testing company. Carol Miller did not respond to requests for comment about her financial filings.
This report was part of the Conflicted Congress Project, which reviewed 9,000 financial-disclosure reports for every sitting lawmaker and their top-ranking staffers.
The Conflicted Congress Project rated the financial compliance of lawmakers as solid, borderline, and dangerous.
14 lawmakers earned the danger rating:
These lawmakers have violated the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act of 2012 by failing to properly disclose financial trades, many to a significant degree. Some also employ senior staff members who’ve violated the STOCK Act or haven’t themselves taken proactive steps to avoid potential conflicts of interest.
- Rep. Pat Fallon – Texas (R)
- Sen. Dianne Feinstein – California (D)
- Rep. Lance Gooden – Texas (R)
- Rep. Diana Harshbarger – Tennessee (R)
- Rep. Kevin Hern – Oklahoma (R)
- Rep. Chris Jacobs – New York (R)
- Rep. Susie Lee – Nevada (D)
- Rep. Tom Malinowski – New Jersey (D)
- Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney – New York (D)
- Rep. Dan Meuser – Pennsylvania (R)
- Rep. Blake Moore – Utah (R)
- Rep. Kim Schrier – Washington (D)
- Rep. Tom Suozzi – New York (D)
- Sen. Tommy Tuberville – Alabama (R)
I saw vote them all out in 2022!