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President Donald Trump tore into former House Speaker Rep. Nancy Pelosi in a blistering Truth Social post, accusing her and her husband Paul of making a fortune through insider trading and mocking their financial success as implausible without privileged access.

“Crooked Nancy Pelosi, and her very ‘interesting’ husband, beat every Hedge Fund in 2024. In other words, these two very average ‘minds’ beat ALL of the Super Geniuses on Wall Street, thousands of them. It’s all INSIDE iNFORMATION!” Trump wrote, before taking a personal swipe over her role in the impeachment battles.

“Is anybody looking into this??? She is a disgusting degenerate, who Impeached me twice, on NO GROUNDS, and LOST! How are you feeling now, Nancy???” he continued.

Pelosi, 85, has consistently rejected accusations of insider trading. “Pelosi does not own any stocks and has no knowledge or subsequent involvement in any transactions,” her spokesperson Ian Krager said last month.

While Pelosi’s office has not yet responded to Trump’s latest comments, her husband’s investment track record has long drawn attention. Exact wealth figures are unknown because lawmakers are not required to disclose their net worth, but Quiver Quantitative estimates place the couple’s fortune at more than $263 million, ranking Pelosi among Congress’s richest members.

Paul Pelosi’s trades have regularly outperformed the market, according to data collected by the New York Post on Sunday. In 2024, his investments reportedly yielded a 54% return, more than doubling the S&P 500’s 25% gain. One notable move came in January when he purchased Tempus AI shares for $31.83 each; the stock nearly doubled after the company announced a $200 million partnership with AstraZeneca.

Other high-profile trades have included well-timed investments in NVIDIA, Palo Alto Networks, Vistra Energy, and more. In another case that drew scrutiny, Paul Pelosi sold roughly $2.2 million worth of Microsoft stock just months before the FTC opened an antitrust investigation into the company.

In 2021, Nancy Pelosi defended lawmakers’ right to trade stocks, calling it part of a “free-market economy,” though she has since expressed willingness to consider certain restrictions.

The issue resurfaced last month when Sen. Josh Hawley’s (R-Mo.) Preventing Elected Leaders from Owning Securities and Investments (PELOSI) Act advanced through a Senate committee. The legislation would ban lawmakers from owning or trading individual stocks. Trump initially bristled at the bill, believing it would require him to divest, but shifted his position after learning it wouldn’t affect presidents until early 2029.

Pelosi has not yet announced if she will run for reelection in 2026.