Categories: ePaymentMarketing

US Crypto Campaign Funding Groups Raise $102m

Political groups backed by the cryptocurrency industry have raised more than $102 million (£82m) to spend on backing crypto-friendly candidates in this year’s US elections, making them the third-biggest funding group, according to a report by Public Citizen citing data from Opensecrets.org.

The only two super PACs to have raised more money so far are one backing Ron DeSantis’ failed presidential campaign and one backing Democratic Senate candidates, Public Citizen found.

The funds have been gathered by Fairshake, a super PAC, meaning it can raise and spend unlimited funds to back candidates of its choice, and its affiliates the Defend American Jobs PAC and Protect Progress PAC.

The intense fundraising activity comes at a critical moment for the crypto industry, which is facing heightened scrutiny from regulators such as the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) following a string of high-profile failures, including that of crypto trading platform FTX, whose former chief executive Sam Bankman-Fried was himself a major political donor.

Image credit: Jonathan Borba/Pexels

Corporate spending

Four of the eight corporate crypto super PAC donors have settled or are facing charges by the SEC for alleged violations of securities laws, with Ripple Labs alone facing nearly $2bn in potential penalties.

More than half of the super PACs funds, some $54m, come from corporate expenditures, primarily from Coinbase and Ripple Labs, with the rest coming from billionaire executives and venture capitalists.

The founders of venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz each donated $11m, the Winklevoss twins donated $5m and Coinbase chief executive Brian Armstrong donated $1m, Public Citizen said.

Of the six 2024 primary contests that have taken place so far in which crypto super PACs supported candidates, only one candidate backed by crypto groups has lost.

Senate contests

Crypto super PACs have said they are planning to spend to support Senate campaigns in Ohio and Montana, where Democrats Sherrod Brown and Jon Tester are seeking reelection.

Brown and Tester both sit on the Senate Banking Committee and have been critical of cryptocurrencies and particularly their use by groups the US sees as bad actors, such as Hamas or North Korean-backed hackers Lazarus Group.

The US elections in November cover the presidency as well as all lawmakers in the House of Representatives and Senate.

Matthew Broersma

Matt Broersma is a long standing tech freelance, who has worked for Ziff-Davis, ZDnet and other leading publications

Recent Posts

US DOJ To Propose Google Penalties By End Of Year

US judge gives Justice Department until end of year to formulate plan for Google punishment…

22 mins ago

Trump ‘To Appoint Musk’ To Gov’t Efficiency Role If Elected

Donald Trump says he would appoint Elon Musk to lead government efficiency commission if elected,…

52 mins ago

Australian Official Received Death Threats After Musk Criticism

Australian eSafety commissioner says she received death threats after Musk criticised her for trying to…

1 hour ago

Man Arrested After ‘Earning Millions’ From AI Music Tracks

US man allegedly earned more than $10m in royalties streaming hundreds of thousands of fake…

2 hours ago

NCSC Calls Out Cyber-Attacks From Russia’s GRU

UK's NCSC and allies outline campaign of attacks from unit of Russia's military intelligence service…

2 hours ago

TfL Cuts Data Feeds Amidst Cyber-Attack Fallout

Transport for London cuts live data feeds to travel apps and restricts access to online…

3 hours ago
  翻译: