The crypto industry’s annual spending on lobbying in Washington more than doubles

Published: 18 February 2023 at 7:01 a.m. ET

The cryptocurrency industry sharply increased its annual spending on lobbying in Washington last year, shelling out more than ever before — $21.55 million.

This is according to an analysis of disclosures by OpenSecrets, which rounded up disclosures from more than 50 industry players.

Spending in 2022 was more than double the crypto industry’s…

The cryptocurrency industry sharply increased its annual spending on lobbying in Washington last year, shelling out more than ever before — $21.55 million.

This is according to an analysis of disclosures by OpenSecrets, which rounded up disclosures from more than 50 industry players.

2022’s spending was more than double the crypto industry’s lobbying outlay of $8.29 million for 2021, as shown in the chart below.

The upturn came during a year when the industry suffered a black eye thanks to the collapse of crypto exchange FTX in November.

FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, who is currently awaiting trial on fraud charges, had been a megadonor for the 2022 midterm elections, but politicians have ended up returning or giving away campaign contributions tied to FTX.

Campaign contributions are not considered lobbying, although donors make them to build relationships with policymakers.

Bitcoin

BTCUSD

,
the most famous virtual currency, lost more than 60% in 2022, but it has increased in 2023.

Don’t miss: SEC accuses Terraform Labs and CEO Do Kwon of defrauding crypto investors

While the crypto industry’s lobbying spending is growing, the amounts paid out by individual companies and trade groups fall far short of lobbying spending by major Washington players. Amazon.com Inc.

AMZN

and its subsidiaries, for example, paid out $21.38 million in 2022, according to an analysis by OpenSecrets, a research group that tracks money in American politics.

From the MarketWatch archives (February 2022): Congressional Crypto Traders: The US Lawmakers Who Buy and Sell Digital Currencies

The table below, also based on OpenSecrets data, shows the 2022 lobbying expenditures of companies that aimed to influence Washington on crypto-related issues. Coin base

COIN

paid out the most, followed by the Blockchain Association.

Name

Lobbying expenses in 2022

Coin base

$3,390,000

Blockchain Assn

$1,900,000

Crypto.com

$1,180,000

Binance Holdings

$1,110,000

Ripple

$1,080,000

Chamber of Digital Commerce

$936,406

DeFi Education Fund

$930,000

Dapper Labs

$880,000

FTX.US

$720,000

Taxbit Inc

$520,000

Tether Operations

$480,000

Stellar Development Foundation

$460,000

Payward Inc

$440,000

Digital currency group

$440,000

Chainalysis Inc

$430,000

Vaultlink Inc

$360,000

Crypto council for innovation

$350,000

Chia network

$340,000

Bitcoin Assn

$340,000

Coinflip

$320,000

Ava Labs

$300,000

Global Digital Asset & Cryptocurrency Assn

$280,000

Riot Blockchain

$280,000

Anchor Laboratories

$250,000

Gemini Trust Co

$240,000

Paxos Trust Co

$220,000

Saito Tech

$200,000

Algorand Inc

$200,000

Blockchains LLC

$195,000

The Association for Digital Asset Markets

$190,000

Galaxy Digital Holdings

$190,000

Bullish USA

$180,000

Stone Ridge

$180,000

Celo Foundation

$176,500

Bitwise Asset Management

$160,000

Overstock.com

$160,000

Filecoin Foundation

$150,000

Used blockchain

$150,000

ConsenSys software

$150,000

Open sea

$140,000

Uniswap Labs

$130,000

Proof of trust

$120,000

Marathon Digital Holdings

$120,000

Paradigm operations

$100,000

Proof of Stake Alliance

$100,000

Hive Blockchain Technologies

$80,000

Brale Inc

$80,000

LMAX Group

$70,000

The Exodus Movement

$70,000

BlockFi International

$40,000

Bit5ive LLC

$22,500

Genre

$20,000

Source: OpenSecrets.org

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