Senate Democrats Poised to Enable Trump's Crypto Corruption [View all]

As my colleague David Dayen has been covering here at the Prospect, the cryptocurrency industry is in the midst of a major lobbying push to get pro-crypto legislation through Congress. The sticking point is the Senate, where to get around the filibusters 60-vote requirement, at least seven Democratic votes would be needed, assuming every Republican supports it.
That support seemed to be forthcoming, until Donald Trump started using crypto for some of his habitual mind-boggling corruption. Just before taking office, he launched a meme coin and then immediately rug-pulled buyers to the tune of $350 million; he then promised that the biggest $TRUMP bag-holders would get a dinner at the White House. Then Trump launched his own stablecoin, USD1 (that is, a crypto token whose value is supposedly pegged to the dollar), and in May, an Abu Dhabi investment fund announced that it would use that coin to facilitate a $2 billion purchase of the crypto exchange Binance. That was too much for these Democratic senators to stomach.
But not for long. Semafor reports that pro-crypto Democratsthat is, the ones who collected millions in crypto campaign contributionshave gotten a few token concessions, but nothing whatsoever that would stop Trumps corruption spree, and this is likely enough to get it through. Sources familiar with negotiations have confirmed to the Prospect that a vote is planned for next week and, as things stand, it will probably pass.
Its important to remember that crypto has not ever demonstrated any legitimate business use case at scale. Overwhelmingly, it is used for pure financial speculation and crimeboth scams internal to the system like rug pulls, pump-and-dumps, and wash trading; also good old-fashioned robbery and/or money laundering by drug cartels, human traffickers, or North Korea. For any real business, crypto is worse than normal money in every way: less stable, less secure, and orders of magnitude more risky and expensive to use. Even several crypto-affiliated businesses that theoretically should have worked, like trading platforms making fees off crypto gamblers selling magic beans to each other, have turned out to be riddled with fraud and collapsed.
https://prospect.org/blogs-and-newsletters/tap/2025-05-16-senate-democrats-trumps-crypto-corruption/