28 comments

  • khurs an hour ago

    A UK party rising up the charts is caught up in a scandal - crypto guy gave the party leader (personally) £5m which he failed to declare and he started the party a few days later indicating he was paid to start the party.

    It came out when Crypto guy gave an interview and mentioned it not realising the consequences.

    The party leader first claimed it was for security.

    Then it was determines he had bough property with it.

    https://www.channel4.com/news/factcheck/factcheck-nigel-fara...

    • stanleykm 41 minutes ago

      I wonder why all the libertarian freedom loving crypto guys keep backing fascists

      • nkrisc 10 minutes ago

        It’s not your freedom they care about.

      • sardine5 8 minutes ago

        Christopher Harborne - not just a libertarian freedom loving crypto guy, but also the largest single shareholder of QinetiQ, a pretty notable UK Defence company.

      • Finnucane 12 minutes ago

        Because they're not as much 'freedom loving' as they are 'selfish dicks.'

      • ratelimitsteve 35 minutes ago

        if you're in with the fascists they are the most liberty-oriented party. you can do whatever you want, entirely without regard to the law.

      • mothballed 37 minutes ago

        It's not hard to figure out, the fascists have been more explicitly welcoming to crypto freedom or at least put themselves out there to solicit that vote even if you claim their underlying policies aren't. Trump offered the freedom of Ross Ulbricht at the libertarian convention, did Kamala come to the libertarian convention and offer anything?

  • khurs an hour ago

    Andreessen Horowitz - $51.65m... Is A16z the Goldman Sachs (Vampire Squid) of the Tech world?

    The first thing you need to know about Goldman Sachs is that it’s everywhere. The world’s most powerful investment bank is a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money.

    https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/the-grea...

  • BiraIgnacio an hour ago

    Is this a little or a lot? any idea how that compares to other industries and donors?

    • thehoff 37 minutes ago

      It almost doesn't matter? If it was less than other industries doesn't make it okay. I like any/all callouts of industries and their political "donations". Its all so ridiculous.

    • ratelimitsteve 17 minutes ago

      someone below is saying it's over a third of all spending so far. which feels like a lot to me.

    • knorker 8 minutes ago

      When it's from an industry consisting 100% of organized crime and negative-sum grifting, it's a lot.

      I'd read a donation with "from the oil industry" and "from The Organization Of Stealing All Copper from Public Spaces" as different types of "bad", even if I'd prefer that the oil industry also not buy politicians.

      For the avoidance of doubt, blockchain people are the copper thieves.

  • shemnon42 25 minutes ago

    Rookie numbers.

  • bhouston an hour ago

    The fact that political spending is considered free speech in the US gives the rich and already powerful massive sway in the political system, it is basically tiled hard towards them. And then combined with how PACs hide their funding behind names like "Everyday Americans Making the World Better" when really it just wants to lessen online gambling laws for a billion dollar company, is just brutal. US politics is a dystopian future realized.

    • arealaccount 29 minutes ago

      Even crazier that they sway elections in districts they've never even visited nor intend to ever visit

    • buellerbueller 38 minutes ago

      Enabled yet again, today, by the SCOTUS.

  • downrightmike an hour ago

    Crypto firms have supplied more than one-third of all corporate money so far in this year's elections

    Fairshake has received $82 million in contributions this cycle

    Crypto, AI, big tech and online betting firms have spent $294 million combined on 2026 elections

    June 30 (Reuters) - Cryptocurrency companies have spent $189 million so far to influence the 2026 U.S. midterm elections, outpacing their spending for the previous election cycle, according to a new report, opens new tab from Public Citizen, a consumer advocacy organization. More than one-third of all corporate money contributed to this year's November elections, and primary elections leading up to them, has come from the crypto industry, making it the top corporate political spender, the group said.

    The Reuters Daily Briefing newsletter provides all the news you need to start your day. Sign up here. Crypto was also the top corporate donor in the 2024 election cycle, when it contributed $170 million and many of the congressional candidates it boosted won their races.

    Companies in the artificial intelligence, big tech and online betting sectors have also contributed heavily. Combined with crypto, they have spent $294 million on the 2026 elections so far. In November, the full House of Representatives will be up for reelection, along with roughly a third of the Senate.

    "The big takeaway is that corporate money is playing a bigger role than ever in our elections, and it's only expanding," said Rick Claypool, a research director at Public Citizen and the author of the report.

  • baggachipz 9 minutes ago

    "Very legal and very cool"

  • ChrisArchitect 33 minutes ago
  • ChrisArchitect 34 minutes ago

    Related:

    The AI industry is pouring millions into US elections

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48687483

  • paulpauper 44 minutes ago

    As far as the US is concerned, given how badly bitcoin has done since Trump was inaugurated, the worst performing asset class by far, I would say the ROI has been pretty bad. Industries and sectors that donated nothing still got bailouts and other initiatives, such as AI, quantum, metals, and semiconductors. Noting for crypto donors. No bailouts, or even mentions on twitter. Politicians can take money but they don't have to honor their end of the deal to give anything in return.

    • hgoel 33 minutes ago

      But is that also accounting for any regulatory pressure/investigations that might have otherwise hit those donors? Perhaps just the promise of not being prosecuted for their crimes if/when their scam collapses is sufficient ROI for them.

      • ratelimitsteve 10 minutes ago

        that and directing US dollars into crypto markets via the government. you can sell people on the idea with the same arguments that are currently moderately successful in convincing people to do things like buy gold as a retirement plan, and anyone who is holding crypto before the government "invests" in it will see incredible returns as demand spikes for an asset whose supply is intentionally capped. The crypto whales are suddenly in the presence of a crypto leviathan in the form of government spending, they not only make a ton of money but they can sell out without crashing the market (solving a huge problem, esp for shitcoin whales but realistically for major stakeholders in all crypto) and everyone who's actually involved in the decision-making process leaves with fistfuls of money from people who didn't meaningfully have a say in which bag they'd be purchasing or at what price.

    • righthand a minute ago

      They got Ross Ulbricht out of jail and a few cryptocurrency scammers out too. That’s all the cryptobros wanted was pretty much nothing but symbolism.

    • knorker 3 minutes ago

      The bitcoin people bought a pardon for their hero, one of the biggest facilitators of drug smuggling in the world, and someone who personally paid money to have people killed. Including explicitly saying to indiscriminately kill whatever unrelated bystander happens to be there.

      That was a stated goal for them, and they got what they paid for. So good ROI on that.

      They've gotten PAAAAH-LENTY for their money.

      Did they get their pet asset to go up in price? No. But they managed to buy "crime is legal now". The shitcoin rugpull industry is making BANK, and the DOJ has been paid off to look the other way.

      Investigations have been shut down, and people have been freed. They are not the losers. Society is.

    • Finnucane 9 minutes ago

      Some of them have gotten out of jail.

    • doctorpangloss 19 minutes ago

      Yeah but Justin Sun is a stable genius, losing tons of money is just part of his 4D chess.

    • ratelimitsteve 8 minutes ago

      I mean, anyone can fail to deliver their end of any agreement. They may have learned a harsh lesson about bargaining with Trump, but that doesn't mean that it was dumb to pursue the deal as negotiated or would be dumb to pursue a similar deal with someone who might actually follow through on it.