American voters who own crypto are on the rise, just in time for the midterms
- “Crypto voters,” which pollsters described as voters who own or are considering owning digital assets, make up 44% of voters nationwide
- The core group consists mostly of young men, with 58% of them being men under the age of 55, while 32% of crypto-owning voters are people of color, according to the poll
As the midterm elections approach, so-called “cryptocurrency voters” are becoming an increasingly desirable bloc, according to a political action committee that recently hit the scene.
GMI PAC, a crypto-focused group backed by SkyBridge’s Anthony Scaramucci, was formed in January 2022. “GMI” stands for popular crypto slang, “gonna make it.”
The PAC and its Policy Institute recently commissioned a poll of voters and their attitudes toward cryptocurrency. The survey was conducted by Global Strategy Group and Fabrizio, Lee & Associates. The poll’s findings suggest that ordinary voters may start to care about crypto-political issues just in time for the midterms of this year.
“Crypto voters,” which pollsters described as voters who own or are considering owning digital assets, make up 44% of voters across the United States. A subset of 17% of voters already own crypto, according to the poll.
“This core of 17% who already own cryptocurrency is an extremely competitive group of voters that both Democrats and Republicans have fielded in recent elections,” the pollsters wrote in a report shared with Blockworks.
The core group is mostly young men, with 58% of them being men under 55. One-third of crypto-owning voters are people of color, according to the poll. And — even better for candidates — they don’t appear to be overwhelmingly from one party or another, the poll found.
“Both parties are in a battle to connect with younger black and Hispanic males — groups that have shown in recent cycles to be less calcified in their party preferences. These groups also own crypto at much higher prices,” Bobby said Kaple, senior advisor to GMI PAC. “Connecting with them on crypto issues can unlock just enough support to win some of these tight races.”
Cryptocurrency ownership spans the partisan divide, the report notes: “18% of Democrats currently own cryptocurrency, while 16% of independents and 16% of Republicans do,” it said.
GMI PAC leaders are banking on crypto-focused voters turning out in November.
“At 17% of the electorate, the crypto voter bloc is large enough to swing a close race,” said Michael Carcaise, executive director of GMI PAC. “For example, in 2020, Biden defeated Trump in Pennsylvania by 80,555 votes. We expect more than 837,000 Pennsylvanians who own crypto to go to the polls in November.”
Other GMI PAC backers include FTX, run by billionaire Sam Bankman-Fried, who vowed to donate $1 billion or more to political causes before 2024, and crypto data provider Messari. Messari’s boss, Ryan Selkis, was rumored at the Mainnet Conference in New York in September 2021 to push the idea of a US Senate as himself.
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