
Trump crypto ventures loom over Senate stablecoin vote
President Trump's recent cryptocurrency dealings are casting a shadow over efforts to pass legislation for the industry at a key moment, as the Senate gears up to vote on a stablecoin bill Thursday.
Senate leadership is preparing to bring the GENIUS Act, which would create a regulatory framework for payment stablecoins, to the floor. However, a contingent of crypto-friendly Democrats have threatened to vote it down, as they accuse Republicans of cutting off negotiations prematurely.
At the same time, Trump's growing crypto ties are giving new fuel to the legislation's opponents, who argue it will allow the president and his family to profit from the industry.
'Trump's not helping himself,' said Nic Carter, a founding partner at crypto investment firm Castle Island Ventures, adding, 'Everyone I know in crypto is very frustrated by this. It's like a completely unnecessary own goal.'
Trump's close ties to the crypto industry have raised concerns since before he took office. As the president embraced digital assets on the campaign trail last fall, he and his sons launched their own crypto venture, World Liberty Financial. And shortly before his inauguration, Trump and his wife Melania launch meme coins.
Both World Liberty Financial and the president's meme coin have drawn scrutiny once again in recent weeks.
Trump is set to attend a dinner with the top investors in his meme coin later this month. The announcement in April, which encouraged participants to 'hold as much $TRUMP as you can,' caused the price of the token to spike 60 percent.
World Liberty Financial also announced last week that Emirati firm MGX would be using the company's brand-new stablecoin to conduct a $2 billion transaction with crypto exchange Binance.
Democrats have decried the moves as efforts by the president and his family to enrich themselves, calling for ethics investigations into both the meme coin dinner and the World Liberty Financial.
They argue that the meme coin and stablecoin can be used by Trump to improperly profit off his office and by outside actors, including foreign actors, to attempt to buy influence with the president.
The Trump family owns a 60 percent stake in World Liberty Financial, and a company affiliated with the family receives 75 percent of the revenue collected from its coin sales.
The growing scrutiny surrounding the president and his family's crypto dealings is threatening to upend his administration's efforts to pass long sought legislation providing the industry with greater regulatory clarity.
The administration and Republican lawmakers have repeatedly said they hope to pass both stablecoin and market structure legislation by August.
Stablecoin legislation appeared to be sailing forward, with versions passing out of both the Senate Banking Committee and House Financial Services Committee earlier this year.
However, progress came to a screeching halt last week. After Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) moved Thursday to expedite a vote on the GENIUS Act, nine Democrats who had previously backed the upper chamber's stablecoin bill pulled their support.
The group, which included four senators who voted to advance the bill out of committee in March, said Saturday that the floor text put forward by Republicans lacked sufficiently strong provisions on anti-money laundering and national security, among other issues.
Sen. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.), the top Democrat on the Senate Banking Digital Assets Subcommittee, accused Republicans of attempting to force through the legislation without further negotiations.
'All of a sudden the language changed,' he told MeidasTouch in a Tuesday interview released Wednesday. 'They backtracked on some of the stuff we had already approved. They weren't even moving forward with further legislation. And then they announced the date of the first vote.'
'I think the purpose of that was really to put Democrats in a bad position and force us to vote for it,' he continued.
'You can't throw us in the corner,' Gallego added. 'You can't try to f— us and then say like, 'Hey, deal with it.' That's just not going to work, especially when you still need our votes no matter what.'
Thune signaled an openness to making changes sought by Democrats on Tuesday but also appeared intent on moving the GENIUS Act forward despite recent pushback. He underscored the monthslong process that had gone into the legislation.
'My question is — when will the Democrats take yes for an answer?' Thune said at a press conference. 'If they have other suggestions and things that they want incorporated into the draft, we are certain welcome to taking a look at and working with them on that. But we need to start moving forward.'
'This is a piece of legislation that has broad bipartisan support,' he added. 'I think if we get it on the floor, it could get a really good vote from both Republicans and Democrats. But we've got to get it there.'
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) noted that the two sides are engaged in discussions.
'Look, we all know the level of corruption in the Trump administration is higher than any administration probably in American history,' he said at a presser Tuesday. 'But on stablecoins, Democrats and Republicans are talking to each other.'
Meanwhile, opponents of the GENIUS Act pointed to the World Liberty Financial deal in urging lawmakers to vote against the stablecoin bill. The deal was announced the same day Thune moved to fast-track the legislation.
'A shady fund backed by a foreign government just announced it will make a $2 billion deal using Donald Trump's stablecoins,' Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) said in a statement.
'Meanwhile, the Senate is gearing up to pass the 'GENIUS' Act – stablecoin legislation that will make it easier for the President and his family to line their own pockets. This is corruption and no senator should support it,' she added.
Concerns about Trump's crypto moves have also spilled over to the House side, prompting Democrats to walk out of a hearing on market structure legislation Tuesday.
Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), ranking member on the House Financial Services Committee, objected to the joint hearing between the panel and the House Agriculture Committee.
She sought to block the hearing from moving forward, taking advantage of the need for unanimous consent.
Republicans and some Democrats ultimately proceeded with a more informal roundtable, while Waters and several other Democrats left to hold a separate hearing on Trump's crypto ties.
'I, in good faith, could not provide my consent because our Republican colleagues refuse to address the unprecedented conflicts of interest presented by President Donald Trump and his family,' Waters said.
Carter, the crypto founder, noted that the problems plaguing stablecoin legislation could spell trouble for more complicated market structure legislation.
'Even something as apparently uncontroversial as the stablecoin bill, which has been bipartisan, if that's not moving forward, I think it would be an extreme longshot that we could expect anything on market structure,' he told The Hill.
'Virtually everyone I know in crypto wished that Trump had just executed on his crypto platform and then not done anything else,' he added. 'Right now, it's like they're hugging us to death.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Wall Street Journal
14 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
Oil Slips Amid Abating Fears of Supply Disruptions
0009 GMT — Oil slips in early Asian trade amid abating fears of supply disruptions spurred by President Trump's comment that Israel and Iran agreed to a cease-fire that he said could result in the end of the war between the countries. In a post on Truth Social around 6 p.m. Eastern time, Trump said there will be a 'complete and total' cease-fire in about six hours when Israel and Iran have completed their final mission. Front-month WTI crude oil futures fall 3.8% to $65.93/bbl; front-month Brent crude oil futures drop 3.6% to $68.89/bbl. (


Wall Street Journal
15 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
JGBs Edge Lower on Possible Iran-Israel Cease-Fire Agreement
0017 GMT — JGBs edge lower in price terms in the morning Tokyo session on a possible Iran-Israel cease-fire agreement which would reduce the safe-haven appeal of sovereign debt. President Trump said Israel and Iran agreed to a cease-fire that could end the war between the countries. Today's focus may also be on the Japanese Finance Ministry's auction of about 1 trillion yen of 20-year JGBs. Market participants will likely favor buying amid expectations of an improvement in supply/demand, Citi Research's rates strategist Tomohisa Fujiki says in a note. The 20-year JGB yield is 0.5bp higher at 2.345%. (
Yahoo
20 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Oil prices sink after Trump announces Israel and Iran have agreed to ceasefire
Oil futures extended losses late Monday after President Trump announced a ceasefire timeline for the Israel-Iran conflict. West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) fell about 4% to trade near $66 per barrel, while Brent crude (BZ=F), the international benchmark, also tumbled to hover near $68 per barrel. "It has been fully agreed by and between Israel and Iran that there will be a Complete and Total CEASEFIRE," wrote Trump on social media Monday evening. Trump laid out a timeline for the end of hostilities. "On the assumption that everything works as it should, which it will, I would like to congratulate both Countries, Israel and Iran, on having the Stamina, Courage, and Intelligence to end, what should be called, 'THE 12 DAY WAR"", wrote Trump. Oil settled 7% lower on Monday after Iran launched missile attacks on a US air base in Qatar, retaliating against Washington's strikes on three Iranian nuclear sites over the weekend. Prices further weakened after Trump hinted Iran's retaliation had been telegraphed. 'I want to thank Iran for giving us early notice, which made it possible for no lives to be lost, and nobody to be injured,' Trump wrote on social media. 'Iran's response appears to have been more symbolic than escalatory — targeting US military bases but avoiding any loss of life or damage to energy structure,' Rebecca Babin, senior energy trader at CIBC Private Wealth, told Yahoo Finance on Monday afternoon. Prior to the retaliatory move, Wall Street weighed various scenarios in the wake of the initial US strikes, including the threat of Iran closing the Strait of Hormuz, a critical chokepoint for roughly 20% of the world's oil flows. JPMorgan analysts projected the closure would be a "severe outcome" scenario, in which oil futures could spike to $120 to $130. "Yet, beyond the short-term spike induced by geopolitics, our base case for oil remains anchored by our supply-demand balance, which shows that the world has enough oil," wrote Natasha Kaneva on Monday morning. JPMorgan expects oil to trade in the low-to-mid-$60 range for the remainder of 2025, assuming the Middle East risk premium fully dissipates. Ines Ferre is a Senior Business Reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on X at @ines_ferre. Click here for in-depth analysis of the latest stock market news and events moving stock prices