- Leading Democratic lawmakers raise concerns over a possible partisan and political tilt of crypto industry affairs in the US.
- President Trump’s pardon of crypto entrepreneur Changpeng Zhao seemed to accentuate the standing allegations of the industry lobbying for executive favors.
- Senator Chris Murphy is a leading critic of an alleged “pay-to-play” narrative between the crypto industry and President Trump.
Democrats are increasingly raising alarm about the partisan nature of the crypto industry in the Trump administration. Lawmakers allege financial lobbying as a major tactic used by formerly bipartisan crypto firms to obtain favors from the presidency and the conservative caucus.
Senator Murphy Condemns Partisan Crypto Play
Senator Chris Murphy from Connecticut highlighted what he described as “how Trump’s corruption factory works,” starting with Coinbase’s donation of over $46 million to Trump allies during the 2024 US election cycle.
Furthermore, he added that the firm sent him a “huge check for his inauguration,” referring to over $18 million sent by crypto firms, including Ripple and Coinbase, to support the ceremony. Senator Murphy attributes these gestures to the eventual withdrawal of the SEC’s lawsuit against Coinbase and the recent donation from Coinbase for the ongoing reconstruction of the White House’s ballroom.
Big Crypto Donations Could Undermine Democratic Trust and Engagement
Coinbase’s Chief Policy Officer, Faryar Shirzad, had since defended the firm and its donations by clarifying that Fairshake is a non-partisan Super PAC (Political Action Committee), as evidenced by its support for multiple Democrats, including three sitting Senators.
Shirzad also stressed that presidential inaugural committees for the past few administrations have been supported by public funding. He further alluded to the possibility of selective outrage against the crypto industry, considering that the lawmaker hasn’t been known to criticize corporate support in the past.
The SEC lawsuit against Coinbase and other firms, said Shirzad, was part of a “grotesque pattern of bullying and abuse of power” by former Chair Gensler. In opposition to the Democratic narrative that it was payback from Trump, the Coinbase CPO emphasized that the withdrawal of the case was the “right decision” based on the merits of the case.
“It may be that you just don’t like our industry. That’s unfortunate given that we’re working hard to help ensure that the US financial system is on the front-edge of innovation,” said Shirzad.
Murphy insists that he does not hate the industry, but finds it hard to separate the crypto industry’s personal and political donations to President Trump from the subsequent drop in lawsuits and the pardon of offenders affiliated with the industry.
Journalist Brendan Pederson recently spoke to Senator Murphy to gain more insights into his “increasingly vocal campaign against the crypto industry’s influence in Washington” and his warning to fellow Democrats regarding crypto legislation.
“The industry is buying pardons and currying favor by helping Trump illegally knock down the White House, funding his military parades,” said Murphy. I don’t know that Democrats are well served by just looking the other way on all of that behaviour.”
The lawmaker would not be convinced that those “investments that are literally unprecedented in American history” do not constitute a case of “pay to play.”
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