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Date: October 15, 2024 at 05:31:53
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Lockheed Martin's stock price hit an all-time high today...

URL: https://x.com/JeffreyStClair3


Jeffrey St. Clair, CounterPunch reposted
Sludge@Sludge
·
11h
Lockheed Martin's stock price hit an all-time high today, rising by over 38%
over the past 12 months. Among those profiting: more than a dozen members
of Congress, who vote to approve defense contracts.

Senators, reps, and $$ amounts listed:


Responses:
[442445]


442445


Date: October 15, 2024 at 05:36:31
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Lockheed Martin's stock price hit an all-time high today...

URL: https://readsludge.com/2024/09/12/here-are-the-members-of-congress-invested-in-war/


excerpt
Here Are the Members of Congress Invested in War
David Moore

Sep 12, 2024

"More than 50 members of Congress own stock in defense contractors whose
profits are soaring from giant Pentagon budgets and supplemental weapons
packages.
Here Are the Members of Congress Invested in War
Israeli army soldiers alongside their mobile artillery cannon in the northern Gaza
Strip, Nov. 2, 2005. (Photo by David Silverman/Getty Images)

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At least 50 members of Congress or other members of their households hold
stock in defense contractors, companies that receive hundreds of billions of
dollars annually from congressionally-crafted Pentagon appropriations
legislation.
The total value of the federal lawmakers’ defense contractors stock holdings
could be as much as $10.9 million, according to a Sludge analysis of 2023
financial disclosures and stock trades disclosed in subsequent periodic
transaction reports.

The most widely held defense contractor stock among senators and
representatives is Honeywell, an American company that makes sensors and
guiding devices that are being used by the Israeli military in its airstrikes in
Gaza. The second most commonly held defense stock by Congress is RTX,
formerly known as Raytheon, the company that makes missiles for Israel’s Iron
Dome, among other weapons systems.

Defense stocks are defined in this analysis as those of the top 100 defense
companies identified by Defense News. They include so-called “pure play”
defense contractors like Lockheed Martin and General Dynamics, as well as
companies like Boeing and General Electric that have large defense contracts
but also engage substantially in other areas of business. The stocks are owned
by the members of Congress, their spouses, jointly with their spouses, by their
dependent children, or in a few cases, by a qualified blind trust. The latest
annual financial disclosures, covering 2023, were due on Aug. 15.

"It is an obvious conflict of interest when a member of Congress owns
significant stock investments in a company and then votes to award the same
company lucrative federal contracts." - Craig Holman, Public Citizen
National defense funding, which is authorized annually by Congress, has grown
steadily each year during the Biden administration. For fiscal year 2024, the
national defense topline was at least $145 billion larger than it was in 2021, an
increase of nearly 20% from the last defense budget of the Trump
administration. More than half of the Pentagon budget goes to private
contractors, defense policy analyst Stephen Semler found in a Sludge analysis.

In fiscal year 2024, Congress approved a record high of $953 billion in defense
funding: in December 2023, it approved $886 billion through the National
Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), then in April it passed a supplemental
security appropriations bill with an additional $67 billion for the Pentagon. The
supplemental included tens of billions of dollars in military aid for Israel,
Ukraine, Taiwan, and funding to replenish U.S. weapons supplies.

In the Senate, several lawmakers with investments in defense contractors sit on
committees that set and approve defense spending: three are on the
Committee on Armed Services (SASC), and five are members of the Committee
on Appropriations, including two who sit on the key Defense Appropriations
subcommittee. This body has jurisdiction over drafting legislation to allocate
funds to government agencies including the Department of Defense, as well as
supplemental spending bills...."


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