Unlock the White House Watch newsletter for free
Your guide to what Trump’s second term means for Washington, business and the world
The crypto industry has amassed a $193mn war chest to back candidates who support the sector in the upcoming midterm elections, as US lawmakers consider a landmark bill to create a trading structure for cryptocurrencies.
Fairshake, a fundraising vehicle backed by some of the biggest names in crypto, was a force in the previous election cycle when, together with affiliated groups, it spent more than $130mn supporting pro-crypto candidates from both main political parties.
The latest haul by the Political Action Committee (Pac), announced on Wednesday, includes a $25mn contribution from Coinbase, $25mn from Ripple and $24mn from venture capital group Andreessen Horowitz, making it one of the best funded political forces in the US.
“With the midterms approaching, we are united behind our mission with Fairshake continuing to oppose anti-crypto politicians and support pro-crypto leaders,” said a spokesperson for Fairshake.
“The time is now to protect consumers, cultivate American innovation and open up the financial system to more Americans.”
Fairshake’s involvement in the previous cycle, in which almost all the candidates it backed won convincingly, has already paid off for the industry with a bill passed last year that created a comprehensive federal regulatory framework for stablecoins.
The fate of the latest crypto bill remains tenuous after big players, including Coinbase, opposed a recent draft ahead of an important committee vote. Large banks are also opposed to elements of the legislation, arguing that dollar-pegged tokens traded on exchanges should not offer yield to customers.
Other crypto companies have been pushing for compromise, claiming an imperfect bill is better than no legislation.
The Senate agriculture committee is scheduled to meet on Thursday to debate part of the proposed bill’s text. A vote on another part of the legislation, which falls under the Senate banking committee’s jurisdiction, has been delayed amid the disputes within the industry.
Crypto executives and banking bosses are also due to gather in the White House on Monday as part of an attempt to revive the stalled bill.
Several new Pacs supporting the crypto industry’s interests have cropped up since the previous midterm election cycle. Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, co-founders of crypto exchange Gemini, donated roughly $21mn worth of bitcoin to the Digital Freedom Fund Pac.
In September, a Super Pac, which can raise and spend unlimited amounts of money and whose treasurer is listed as a Cantor Fitzgerald executive, said it had raised $100mn for “pro-innovation, pro-crypto candidates”. Cantor Fitzgerald, run by US commerce secretary Howard Lutnick’s family, has become a go-to bank for crypto businesses, including for stablecoin group Tether.
