Crypto industry emerges as power broker in key 2026 Senate races

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In 2024, the cryptocurrency industry spent more than $200 million to help elect candidates with a light-touch approach towards regulation, including President Donald Trump. As crypto legislation begins to take shape in Washington, D.C., interest groups representing the industry are poised to expand their influence in down-ballot races in a series of close elections that will determine which party will control Congress after the mid-term elections in 2026.

For crypto backers, the stakes of House and Senate races have become increasingly clear in the 119th Congress. Both chambers have introduced bipartisan legislation to regulate stablecoins, the STABLE and GENIUS Acts, with the latter narrowly passing a key Senate hurdle Monday night after an earlier version of the bill failed without Democratic support. 

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Stand with Crypto, an advocacy group that backs “common-sense regulations” for the digital asset industry and serves as a guide to help crypto-aligned donors determine which political candidates to support, championed the Senate’s vote to bypass the filibuster as a success. The group said its supporters “contacted their senators tens of thousands of times and over 120K watched our livestream of the GENIUS Act vote.” 

US Capitol in the fall

For crypto backers, the stakes of House and Senate races have become increasingly clear in the 119th Congress. (Photo by Kevin Carter / Getty Images)

Though a number of obstacles remain before Congress could potentially send the GENIUS Act to Trump’s desk, the crypto industry can check off a significant item from its list, leaving advocates and donors encouraged by Monday night’s vote after a series of scuff-ups threatened to leave the bill hanging in the balance. 

Republicans currently hold a 53-47 majority in the Senate (two senators are independent but caucus with Democrats). That is likely to hold, though Republicans would like to add a seat with a win in Georgia, and hold two others in North Carolina and Maine. 

Ahead of Monday night’s vote, Stand with Crypto Community Director Mason Lynaugh said the group’s 2.2 million supporters had an “undeniable impact in the 2024 election” and were watching the vote closely to hold lawmakers accountable.

Though the crypto industry spent millions to send Trump to the White House last fall, the industry’s support does not fall neatly along party lines. Freshmen Sens. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, John Curtis, R-Utah, Reuben Gallego, D-Ariz., and Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., all counted on the industry’s backing to win crucial battleground races in 2024.