Who is April Mcclain Delaney?
April McClain Delaney is a Democratic U.S. Representative from Maryland, elected in 2024 to represent the 6th congressional district. She is married to former Representative John Delaney (D-MD), who served the same district from 2013 to 2019 before running an unsuccessful presidential campaign.
McClain Delaney comes from a background in policy and government service, and ran on a platform emphasizing healthcare access, economic opportunity, and environmental protection. Her 2024 election win came in a competitive district in the Maryland suburbs and exurbs.
Most Traded Stocks
Based on all STOCK Act filings in Capitol Trader's database, April Mcclain Delaney has traded these stocks most frequently:
| Ticker | Purchases | Sales | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| TDG | ↑ 10 | — | 10 |
| TSCO | ↑ 1 | ↓ 6 | 7 |
| SCI | — | ↓ 6 | 6 |
| HUBB | ↑ 5 | — | 5 |
| ENTG | ↑ 5 | — | 5 |
| CHRW | ↑ 2 | ↓ 3 | 5 |
| VIK | — | ↓ 4 | 4 |
| MORN | — | ↓ 4 | 4 |
| FBIN | — | ↓ 4 | 4 |
| CDW | — | ↓ 4 | 4 |
Net buying activity has been heaviest in TDG, HUBB and ENTG. Net selling has been most notable in TSCO and SCI.
Trading Pattern Analysis
With 80 disclosed transactions in Capitol Trader's database, McClain Delaney ranks among the most active House traders. This level of activity within her first term of Congress reflects ongoing portfolio management.
Her portfolio disclosures span a range of equity positions. The transaction volume is notable given that she only recently joined the House in January 2025, meaning the disclosures reflect a high pace of activity in a compressed timeframe.
Recent Disclosed Trades
The six most recent STOCK Act disclosures filed by April Mcclain Delaney:
Showing 6 most recent. View all 80 trades →
How to Interpret These Disclosures
All trade data shown here comes from official STOCK Act filings. Using this public government data for investment research is entirely legal — the STOCK Act was designed precisely to give citizens visibility into congressional trading activity.
Key limitations to keep in mind: the STOCK Act allows up to 45 days between a transaction and its public disclosure. By the time you see a filing, any information advantage that may have existed at the time of the trade has likely been incorporated into market prices.
Trade amounts are disclosed as ranges, not exact figures. For example, a filing showing "$50,001 – $100,000" means the actual amount could be anywhere in that bracket. This limits precision in dollar-value analysis.
