U.S. Crypto Lobbyists Flooding the Zone, But Are There Too Many?


Crypto’s moment has seemingly arrived in Washington, D.C., and the industry is trying to make the most of it. But as new organizations hatch and leadership shifts at the top advocacy operations, the field of pro-crypto groups trying to carry the torch is more crowded than ever.

No fewer than a dozen groups — including the Digital Chamber, Blockchain Association and Crypto Council for Innovation — are seeking to steer digital assets policies in the U.S., some of them substantially overlapping in their membership bases, funding sources and in the goals they’re seeking to accomplish.

Most of the leaders of those groups told CoinDesk they have a more-the-merrier view on pushing for friendly policy from President Donald Trump’s highly receptive administration and from Congress, which is increasingly loaded with industry allies.

“Many of the objectives are consistent across these groups,” said Miller Whitehouse-Levine, who recently left the DeFi Education Fund to launch the new Solana Policy Institute. “That’s a good thing, because I think there’s an absolute torrent of legislative and regulatory work that’s going on right now, and we need all the help we could get.”

Congress is chasing several crypto bills, including legislation to set boundaries for crypto markets, oversee stablecoin issuers, curtail digital assets in illicit financing, call for proof of reserves at crypto firms and set up government digital reserves. “We would have 100 more groups and 10,000 more people working on these issues in an ideal world,” Whitehouse-Levine added.

But other current and former policy advocates privately grant that the field is getting packed and that it can be difficult to justify so many entities pulling for the same cause with the same finite universe of congressional staff, White House offices and regulatory officials. In the recent past, groups have talked about reorganization and consolidation, according to people familiar with the discussions, though such efforts haven’t been executed.

Meanwhile, new organizations have hung their shingles in recent weeks, including Whitehouse-Levine’s SPI and the National Cryptocurrency Association, further increasing the ranks. That’s often how the numbers have grown in Washington: A company or lobbyist who feels some specific interest isn’t properly represented and can figure out how to pay for it. And big crypto firms have also set up their own D.C. operations, pushing for their more highly tailored interests.

Cody Carbone is still just days into his leadership of the Digital Chamber — the oldest and largest crypto membership group. The Chamber and virtually every other major digital assets organization has lost or swapped leaders in the opening months of this year — many of them in the past few weeks.


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