According to a report by Public Citizen, cryptocurrency firms have already directed $189 million toward shaping the 2026 U.S. midterm elections, exceeding their total outlay from the prior campaign cycle.
The Numbers Behind the Spending
In the 2024 election, the industry contributed $170 million and also ranked as the top corporate donor.
When you add up contributions from crypto, AI, major tech firms, and online betting companies, the total comes to $294 million. But crypto alone represents over a third of every corporate dollar flowing into political campaigns this election cycle.
The largest individual beneficiary is Fairshake, a political action committee that backs candidates favorable to cryptocurrency. Fairshake has received $82 million in donations this cycle. The leading donors to political action committees that promote corporate agendas include venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, Ripple Labs, Foris DAX (affiliated with Crypto.com), and Coinbase.
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Why the Industry Is Spending So Much
After pouring significant funds into the 2024 cycle, the cryptocurrency sector achieved substantial policy victories, helping to elect a Congress more inclined to support pro-crypto laws. A large portion of that financial firepower came from super PACs, which face no limits on their spending. That trend looks likely to continue this year.
Last year, the sector's 2024 expenditure bore fruit when Congress enacted legislation establishing a federal regulatory structure for stablecoins - crypto tokens tied to the dollar. The measure garnered backing from both Democrats and Republicans in the House and Senate.
The industry is now advocating for further laws, particularly the so-called Clarity Act, which aims to set comprehensive rules for cryptocurrencies. President Donald Trump - who sought crypto donations during his campaign and whose family has benefited from its own digital token - has made crypto reform a priority in his second term. According to Reuters, the White House is actively lobbying for the legislation.
The Political Hurdles
The Clarity Act has stalled in the Senate. It is unclear whether it will pass before the November 2026 elections, when Democrats are projected to win the majority in the House of Representatives. That is when the full House and roughly one-third of the Senate will be up for reelection.
Many Democrats oppose the measure because they believe it fails to adequately bar politicians - including President Donald Trump - from earning money through crypto enterprises. Analysts warn that if the Senate does not approve the bill this year, its chances of ever becoming law are slim.
Rick Claypool, research director at Public Citizen and author of the report, summed up the trend: "The big takeaway is that corporate money is playing a bigger role than ever in our elections, and it's only expanding."
What to Watch
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