Find out which members of Congress are the most egregious reporting violators — ranked by accumulated days late to file.
Data covers 2014–2026 filings from both chambers.
From 2014 to the present, across all tracked members, Congress has missed the STOCK Act’s 45-day disclosure deadline 6,327 times, accumulating 100,789 days late. If you gave me a nickel for every day they were late, today I'd have $5,039.
4 letters sent to Congress via SAVtracker.
The STOCK Act (Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act), signed into law on April 4, 2012, prohibits members of Congress from trading on material non-public information and requires prompt public disclosure of stock transactions — within 45 days of the trade. This page ranks members solely by their documented compliance with that reporting deadline.
| # | Member | Late trades | Worst delay | Accumulated days late (per filing) | Disclosed (upper) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 181 |
Earl Blumenauer
House · D-OR✉ $2
Filed late 2 times since 2018
+ 1 unmeasured filing (paper/range date)
|
4trades | 2days past deadline | 3days | up to $145Krange |
| 182 |
Adam Kinzinger
House · R-IL✉ $2
Filed late 1 time since 2016
+ 1 unmeasured filing (paper/range date)
|
1trades | 3days past deadline | 3days | up to $15Krange |
| 183 |
|
32trades | 2days past deadline | 2days | up to $785Krange |
| 184 |
|
10trades | 2days past deadline | 2days | up to $670Krange |
| 185 |
Mark R. Warner
Senate · D-VA✉ $2
Filed late 1 time since 2018
+ 35 unmeasured filings (paper/range date)
|
1trades | 2days past deadline | 2days | up to $5.0Mrange |
| 186 |
|
2trades | 1days past deadline | 1days | up to $65Krange |
| 187 |
|
1trades | 1days past deadline | 1days | up to $50Krange |