

Five years ago, Brian Armstrong wanted employees of his
cryptocurrency exchange to refrain from expressing political views
at work. Now, the Coinbase CEO seems to be open to involvement with
Republican figures, including members of US President Donald
Trump’s inner circle.
In a May 13 X post, Armstrong said members of the
Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) team, spearheaded by
Elon Musk, though not set up as an actual department, would be
welcome to implement cost-cutting changes at Coinbase after leaving
the US government.
Armstrong offered to set up an accelerated onboarding process
with the exchange, responding to an interview in which at least one
DOGE staffer felt ostracized from Harvard University, where he had
been enrolled.
“If you are looking for your next mission after serving your
country, consider helping create a more efficient financial system
for the world at Coinbase,” Armstrong said.
Since assuming a government position at the White House in
January, Musk and the DOGE team have faced criticism from both
sides of the aisle over their cuts, which often forced out or fired
experienced employees without proper notice.
Lawsuits halting DOGE’s efforts or challenging dismissals are
pending in federal court
from parties alleging illegal or unconstitutional actions.
Coinbase once called itself a ‘mission-focused company’
Armstrong’s remarks, suggesting approval of DOGE’s actions,
represented a sharp departure from the CEO’s position before
Trump’s second term. At the time, many of the companies and
executives in California’s Silicon Valley seemed to be more
publicly aligned with Democrats.
In 2020, amid the COVID-19 pandemic, the death of George Floyd
at the hands of police officers in Minneapolis spurred nationwide
outrage and protests, prompting many companies to take a public
position. Armstrong issued a
notice at the time saying that Coinbase was a “mission-focused
company” that didn’t “advocate for any particular causes or
candidates.”
In response to Armstrong not publicly supporting the Black Lives
Matter movement, many Coinbase employees organized a walkout. The
CEO responded by
claiming the crypto exchange had an “apolitical culture” and that
roughly 5% of Coinbase staff who “didn’t feel they could be on
board with this direction” had accepted an exit package.
Related: Coinbase considered Saylor-like Bitcoin strategy
before opting out: Bloomberg
Less than a month later, Armstrong retweeted a post
suggesting he could support Kanye West for US President in 2020.
After that time, the CEO made few public statements related to
politics and US laws, though he did push for clarification on
crypto tax rules in 2021.
Stand with Crypto moves Coinbase closer to political
advocacy
It’s not entirely clear how Armstrong, at least in public, moved
to be more aligned with political figures. However, for Coinbase,
which the CEO said was intended to be “apolitical,” the change
seemed to have started around the time the company
received a Wells notice
from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in March 2023,
suggesting a potential enforcement action.
Armstrong, like many in the crypto industry, had often
criticized the
SEC before 2023 for not offering regulatory guidelines to follow,
but the Wells notice and subsequent lawsuit seemed to move Coinbase
from participating in a national political discussion on digital
assets to outright advocacy. The company announced the
launch of the Stand with Crypto Alliance in August 2023, a group
“focused on mobilizing the crypto community to directly engage in
the legislative process.”
Before Stand with Crypto, Armstrong used his
platform to call on crypto supporters to contact their elected
officials about digital asset bills moving through Congress. Even
with this initiative tied to the exchange and CEO, the focus wasn’t
on partisan politics, but “common-sense legislation to protect
consumers and their right to crypto.”
“Being anti-crypto is a really bad political strategy going into
2024,” said Armstrong in
a December 2023 X post, in response to legislation aimed at
fighting money laundering with digital assets.
Enter Trump and the 2024 election cycle
In contrast to the 2020 election and even the 2022 midterms, the
2024 cycle stood out in more ways than one. For the first time, a
presidential candidate was openly advocating for policies favoring
cryptocurrency. The amount of money flowing from companies in the
industry, including Coinbase, into federal elections also reached a
record high.
Stand with Crypto, as an advocacy organization, was no
exception. The group launched its own political action committee (PAC)
in May 2024, allowing it to influence the elections through media
buys and direct contributions. Though Stand with Crypto still
organized like-minded voters, its efforts included a renewed focus
on money.
It stood alongside the Fairshake PAC, a committee backed by roughly $45 million from Coinbase and
$45 million from Ripple, which spent more than $130 million in the
2024 election cycle. Armstrong personally contributed $1 million to
Fairshake.
Though the Coinbase CEO suggested a political preference, he
seemed not to take a strong position at the exchange ahead of the
election. In Coinbase’s shareholder letter for the third quarter of
2024, the exchange said it was “prepared to work with either
administration” in the US, whether that meant Trump or Democratic
candidate Kamala Harris.
More front-facing in Washington, DC
Armstrong became more of a presence on Capitol Hill and among
members of the Trump administration after the results of the 2024
election. He personally met with the then-president-elect in November and
reportedly attended at least one of the inauguration events with
other cryptocurrency executives. Coinbase also donated $1 million
to Trump’s inauguration fund.
In February, the exchange announced that the SEC would be
dropping its enforcement action, marking one of
many crypto-related lawsuits the regulator has dismissed under
Trump. Armstrong said at the time that the move was “an important
signal about where things are going.”
The CEO was going to Washington, DC, seemingly more frequently
than he had before this administration took power. In addition to
inauguration events, Armstrong attended a crypto summit at the White House with
Trump and other high-level executives and spoke with lawmakers in
the Capitol to support bills establishing a regulatory framework
for payment stablecoins and crypto markets.
Coinbase CEO in the US Capitol rotunda on May 14.
Source: Brian
Armstrong
The president faces scrutiny from lawmakers and industry leaders
about his ties to the crypto industry, from his family-backed
platform World Liberty Financial to his own memecoin, which was
launched in January. Cointelegraph reached out to Coinbase and
Armstrong but had not received a response at the time of
publication.
“It’s not my place to really comment on President Trump’s
activity,”
said Armstrong in response to concerns about the president’s
potential conflicts of interest over stablecoins.
Where the CEO takes Coinbase and his role in influencing the US
government remains to be seen. There are fewer legal burdens and an
administration that is seemingly friendly to the industry and
Armstrong personally.
Magazine: Elon Musk’s plan
to run government on blockchain faces uphill
battle
...
Continue reading Coinbase CEO's journey from no
'political causes' to hiring DOGE staff
The post
Coinbase CEO's journey from no 'political causes' to
hiring DOGE staff appeared first on
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