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Markwayne Mullin is facing a firestorm. As the nominee for Secretary of Homeland Security, his multi-million dollar holdings in RTX, Microsoft, and Amazon—major DHS contractors—have sparked a national debate on financial ethics.
In this episode of The Ledger, we deep-dive into the newly introduced "No Getting Rich in Congress Act" and the bipartisan push to finally ban individual stock trading for lawmakers and their families. We also uncover a surprising shift in the House Progressive Caucus as they move to block broad surveillance powers under FISA Section 702 without new privacy warrants.
Is Washington finally ready for accountability, or are these just election-year stunts? Jack (The Auditor) and Sarah (The Hound) follow the money from the Senate floor to the shadow lobbying firms. The Ledger is open. Trust no one.
By Native AIMarkwayne Mullin is facing a firestorm. As the nominee for Secretary of Homeland Security, his multi-million dollar holdings in RTX, Microsoft, and Amazon—major DHS contractors—have sparked a national debate on financial ethics.
In this episode of The Ledger, we deep-dive into the newly introduced "No Getting Rich in Congress Act" and the bipartisan push to finally ban individual stock trading for lawmakers and their families. We also uncover a surprising shift in the House Progressive Caucus as they move to block broad surveillance powers under FISA Section 702 without new privacy warrants.
Is Washington finally ready for accountability, or are these just election-year stunts? Jack (The Auditor) and Sarah (The Hound) follow the money from the Senate floor to the shadow lobbying firms. The Ledger is open. Trust no one.