Chris Josephs, the man behind Nancy Pelosi Stock Tracker, just exposed on. the Tucker Carlsen Show how Pelosi and other politicians are out-trading Wall Street—legally. This isn’t just about smart investing. It’s about insider access, shady sell-offs, and a system rigged in their favor. Here’s how they pull it off.
Congress is even more corrupt than you may understand. Chris Josephs runs Nancy Pelosi Stock Tracker on X and has all the details.
— Tucker Carlson (@TuckerCarlson) February 26, 2025
(0:00) The Man Behind the Famous X Account, Nancy Pelosi Stock Tracker
(2:53) The Senator Scandal That Started It All
(11:47) How Is Nancy Pelosi’s… pic.twitter.com/3MK0H8LOvT
Basically, Chris Josephs created an app called Autopilot, which lets regular folks like you and me invest in the same stocks that big-name people—like Nancy Pelosi’s husband, Paul Pelosi—are buying and selling. Her husband’s trades have made some serious money over the years, and people have noticed.
Here’s how it works in plain terms:
- Tracking the Trades: Politicians like Nancy Pelosi have to report their stock trades to the government within 45 days because of a law called the STOCK Act. Paul Pelosi, a venture capitalist, is the one making these trades for their family. Autopilot takes that public info and uses it to figure out what he’s buying or selling.
- Copying Automatically: You sign up for Autopilot and connect it to your own brokerage account (like Robinhood or Fidelity—wherever you already trade stocks). You pick a “portfolio” to follow, like the “Pelosi Tracker.” Then, whenever Paul Pelosi’s trades get reported, Autopilot tells your brokerage to buy or sell the same stocks for you, matching what he’s doing.
- Set Your Amount: You decide how much money you want to put in—say, $500 or $1,000. Autopilot doesn’t need to hold your money; it just works with whatever’s in your existing account. It’ll spread your cash across the same stocks Paul’s trading, in the same proportions.
- Timing Matters: There’s a catch—those trades are reported after they happen, sometimes weeks later. So, you’re not jumping in at the exact moment Paul does. If a stock’s already gone up a ton by the time it’s reported, you might miss the big gains—or buy in at a higher price. Still, as you see, the app’s users have seen some solid returns by following along.
- Cost and Risk: The app has a free version where you can track one portfolio (like Pelosi’s), but if you want it to automatically trade for you or follow multiple people, it’s about $100 a year. And, of course, stocks can go down as well as up—there’s no guarantee you’ll make money just because you’re copying a politician.
So, why do this? Well, Paul Pelosi’s trades have done really well—like a 54% gain in 2024 alone, according to Autopilot. That’s better than a lot of professional investors! Chris Josephs saw that and thought, “If regular people can’t stop politicians from trading, why not let them join in?” Plus, he’s kinda poking at the system, shining a light on how politicians’ trades often beat the market and his avowed intention is to stop them from being able to game the system like this.
In short, Autopilot’s like a “copycat” tool for investing.
She did it!
Jim Cramer is an annoying pundit on CNBC and one of the larkier X accounts invests in the opposite of what he recommends. It usually does quite well. But not as well as our Nancy.
BREAKING: Pelosi did it
— Nancy Pelosi Stock Tracker ♟ (@PelosiTracker_) January 2, 2025
She officially finishes 2024 up 54% and beat out Inverse Cramer for the top portfolio on Autopilot
Never doubt the queen of … pic.twitter.com/eT941WTdPs