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Crypto Is a Clear Winner With Trump as GOP Takes Senate, Sherrod Brown Loses and Gensler Likely Heading for Door

  • The crypto sector’s need for a friendly U.S. president became less urgent on election night as the Senate shifted toward the Republicans who’ve promised digital assets legislation.

  • One of the U.S. lawmakers who stood in the path of crypto legislation, Senator Sherrod Brown, the chair of the Senate Banking Committee, was voted out — thanks in part to the tens of millions that crypto interests spent in his state.

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Having $169 million to spend on U.S. congressional elections can produce fast results in Washington, as the crypto sector’s campaign-finance blitz this year helped rid it of a powerful Democratic senator who stood in the way of legislation and also populated Congress with a large number of new friends.

With former President Donald Trump securing enough electoral votes to return to the White House, the industry could also — for the first time — have an outspoken ally in the presidency. A commander-in-chief who calls himself the “crypto president” and promised to remove SEC Chair Gary Gensler would likely be a boon for the industry, but the gains made earlier in the election had already positioned digital assets with unprecedented advantage.

With the aid of tens of millions the industry spent in Ohio through its Fairshake political action committee, Sherrod Brown’s long Senate career is over and a blockchain businessman, Bernie Moreno, will take his place. The loss of Brown, the Democratic chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, also contributed to the Republicans seizing the Senate majority, meaning Brown’s committee will have a new GOP chairman who will likely welcome crypto legislation rather than leave it in limbo, as Brown had.

The Senate has been the primary roadblock to legislative progress for crypto measures, such as Financial Innovation and Technology for the 21st Century Act (FIT21) that passed the House earlier this year, or the long-awaited stablecoin bill that also cleared the House.

“Sherrod Brown was a top opponent of cryptocurrency and thanks to our efforts, he will be leaving the Senate,” according to a statement from Defend American Jobs, the Fairshake affiliate that concentrated on supporting Republican candidates or opposing anti-crypto Democrats. Moreno, the statement said, “prioritizes innovation, protects American economic interests and will ensure our nationals continued technological leadership.”

Congress is now much more likely to be working on legislation in the next session that will overpower the views of officials at the Securities and Exchange Commission or the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. If such legislation becomes law, the SEC and CFTC will have to execute it and adopt whatever means it uses to define a crypto security — the question still at the heart of U.S. oversight.

Paul Grewal, the chief legal officer of Coinbase Inc. (COIN), took a moment to post on X during election night to say he hopes the SEC understood the message from voters.

“On many, many issues, the voters said loud and clear that they want change,” Grewal wrote. “Crypto is no exception. Stop suing crypto. Start talking to crypto. Initiate rulemaking now. There’s no reason to wait.”

But the crypto industry’s new progress doesn’t end there. The Fairshake spending — totaling about $130 million in this cycle — helped shepherd a large number of new faces toward Congress on election night. The super PAC’s track record was flawless as the counting continued past midnight, with more than 30 of its 58 favored candidates winning their races and none of them losing.

Though the industry leaders that primarily funded the PAC — Coinbase, Ripple and a16z — kept the PAC’s origins and management opaque, the group’s strategy was clear. Fairshake and its two affiliate PACs weren’t concerned with candidates’ other politics as long as they’d support crypto-friendly legislation. And the PACs didn’t pretend to be doing anything other than whatever it took to get their picks elected, which meant the crypto groups rarely mentioned crypto at all in the colossal advertising purchases they made, and they weren’t shy about dumping overwhelming amounts of cash into each chosen race.

The result — which had been previewed by the crypto PACs’ predecessor GMI in the 2022 races — was a significant number of candidates winning primaries in districts purposefully chosen because the primary winner’s party would be likely to win in the general election. That’s why Fairshake’s picks performed so well on election night.

The industry’s campaign financing also went to current lawmakers that had been working on the industry’s behalf already, such as Majority Whip Tom Emmer, a Minnesota Republican, and Ritchie Torres, a New York Democrat.

In the early hours of Wednesday, former President Trump nailed 277 electoral college votes, more than the 270 needed for a return to the White House. The Republican has promised sudden and dramatic help for crypto, including the intention to replace Gensler as SEC chair.

Gensler has earned the ire of the crypto industry for a policy of “regulation by enforcement” and his antagonism toward participants. In the absence of clear legislation covering digital assets, the SEC has sued many crypto companies, including crypto exchanges Coinbase (COIN), Kraken and Binance. Only last week, the regulator sent gaming company Immutable a Wells Notice, a notification that the regulator is planning a lawsuit against it.

Still, the White House fight had already become less urgent for crypto. Whatever happens, the Senate will be controlled next year by the party that has crypto support in its platform.

And with at least two dozen freshman, crypto-friendly representatives starting their careers in the House of Representatives in January, the number of members who support digital assets on Capitol Hill is swelling considerably.

UPDATE (Nov. 6, 10:53 UTC): Updates with Trump’s victory throughout.

UPDATE (Nov. 6, 14:31 UTC): Adds Gensler’s relationship with crypto industry in third from last paragraph.

Edited by Nikhilesh De.