Democrats are escalating their criticism of President Donald Trump's family-linked cryptocurrency ventures as midterm elections approach in November. Leading figures like Senator Elizabeth Warren have called for investigations into projects such as World Liberty Financial. The strategy aims to highlight potential conflicts of interest amid Trump's pro-crypto policies.
Democrats are ramping up attacks on President Donald Trump's cryptocurrency involvements ahead of the November midterm elections. These efforts focus on ventures tied to Trump's family, including memecoins launched the day before his inauguration and the Ethereum-based World Liberty Financial protocol, announced in 2024.
In February, Senator Elizabeth Warren demanded a probe into one of the Trump family's top crypto ventures and initiated an investigation into Binance, which custodies nearly 90% of a Trump-linked stablecoin. Warren described World Liberty Financial as "corruption, plain and simple." A Wall Street Journal report revealed that a UAE firm acquired a 49% stake in the project for $500 million just days before Trump's inauguration, prompting a formal Democratic investigation. World Liberty Financial applied for a banking license in January to promote its USD1 stablecoin and hosted a conference at Mar-a-Lago last month.
Trump's memecoins for himself and First Lady Melania Trump now trade 96% and 99% below their peaks, drawing criticism from Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin and House Democrats. Crypto researcher Molly White stated that "in races where Democrats are challenging explicitly MAGA Republicans, I expect they will challenge those opponents to defend or disavow Trump’s corruption."
Broader Democratic critiques include Senator Jon Ossoff calling the memecoin launch an "impeachable offense," and the late Representative Gerry Connolly alleging Trump has 100 conflicts of interest, describing his crypto dealings as "open corruption." Representative Jamie Raskin claimed Trump has turned the Oval Office into "the world’s most corrupt crypto startup operation."
Trump shifted from dismissing Bitcoin as a "scam against the dollar" in 2021 to embracing crypto in May 2024 at Mar-a-Lago, saying, "If you’re in favour of crypto you’d better vote for Trump." His administration enacted executive orders for a national crypto stockpile, banned central bank digital currencies, pardoned Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht, and signed a stablecoin bill. The crypto industry donated $10.5 million to his campaign and $71 million to Republicans, totaling $197 million in the 2024 cycle. The market reached $4.2 trillion in October before halving.
G. Clay Miller, a former Brooklyn County Democratic Committee member, noted that such critiques intensify during legislative debates like the Clarity Act. However, Ishmael Green of Bochner PLLC suggested attacking World Liberty Financial may not benefit Democrats, as UAE investments align with U.S. interests. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt denied conflicts, stating Trump made the U.S. "the crypto capital of the world" through policies driving innovation.
Trump's approval stands at 40%, per a March YouGov poll, amid other issues like foreign policy and immigration.