The White House has placed a teleprompter operator on administrative leave after the individual was accused of placing bets on President Trump's speeches, according to Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt.
Leavitt confirmed the action during Thursday's press briefing at the White House, stating that 'the individual cited in that report is complying with the CFTC and has been placed on administrative leave.'
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission investigation reportedly centers on whether bets were placed on contracts related to speech timing, content, or market-moving announcements before they occurred.
What the Right Is Saying
Republican officials have emphasized that the administration acted swiftly once aware of the allegations. House Speaker Mike Johnson said the White House's response demonstrated 'zero tolerance for anything that could undermine public trust in government operations.'
Conservative commentators have argued the incident should be viewed as an isolated case rather than a systemic failure. Fox News contributor Katie McGowan wrote that 'placing someone on administrative leave immediately shows this administration takes these allegations seriously and is allowing the investigation to proceed without interference.'
What the Left Is Saying
Democratic lawmakers have called for transparency around how someone in a sensitive White House position could allegedly engage in such activity. Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts said the situation 'raises serious questions about insider access and potential market manipulation at the highest levels of government.'
Progressive advocacy groups have pointed to this as evidence of inadequate vetting procedures for staff with advance knowledge of presidential communications. The Progressive Change Campaign Committee released a statement noting that 'teleprompter operators have intimate knowledge of unreleased policy positions, making any betting activity potentially destabilizing to markets.'
What the Numbers Show
The CFTC has seen increased activity in prediction markets following major political events. According to data from Kalshi, a regulated prediction market platform, trading volume around White House announcements increased 340% year-over-year through 2025.
CFTC enforcement actions related to commodities manipulation carry penalties of up to $1 million per violation for individuals and $10 million for entities under current law. The agency has brought 127 enforcement cases in the past two years.
The Bottom Line
The administration has moved quickly to distance itself from the allegations by placing the operator on leave, but the investigation is likely to draw congressional scrutiny. Lawmakers may request briefings from CFTC officials about how such betting could occur and what safeguards failed to prevent it. The outcome could inform future regulations around political prediction markets and background check procedures for staff with advance access to presidential communications.