Molly White's Citation Needed - I’m launching Tech Influence Watch as AI follows crypto into politics
Episode Date: June 8, 2026Most voters don’t know that crypto and AI companies have spent more than $400 million this cycle to buy Congress. Let’s make that spending visible. Originally published on June 8, 2026....
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I'm Molly White, and you're listening to the audio feed for the Citation Needed Newsletter.
You can see the text version of the newsletter online at citationneeded.news.
I'm launching Tech Influence Watch, as AI follows crypto into politics.
Most voters don't know that crypto and AI companies have spent more than $400 million this cycle to buy Congress.
Let's make that spending visible.
This issue was originally published on June 8, 26.
I've been running my website, follow the crypto, since 2024, tracking the cryptocurrency industry's
influence on our democracy. The industry spent more than $130 million, buying the 2024 elections,
and the strategy worked. Pro-cryptop politicians have proposed or passed industry-drafted legislation
that threatens to open the floodgates to even more predatory crypto products.
Regulatory agencies were gutted, and crypto executives bought direct access to the president
and positions in the White House. Now the artificial intelligence industry is following the same
playbook. Continuing to track only crypto would mean missing half the story. The same operatives are
running both campaigns. Josh Vlasto, longtime advisor and spokesperson for Fairshake,
the cryptocurrency super PAC network responsible for the bulk of crypto's 2024 spending,
is now simultaneously heading leading the future, a pro-AI super PAC network.
Chris Lehane, the political consultant and Coinbase board member who helped establish Fairshake,
and famously told Coinbase employees who questioned whether a crypto voter block existed,
that they would simply invent one, is now an open AI executive,
and one of the people behind the leading the future PAC network.
The same venture capital firms are funding both.
Andresen Horowitz, a crypto heavyweight in the 2024 elections,
is now splitting its political spending across crypto and AI PACs.
The PACs may look different from the outside,
but they're increasingly the same operation with aligned goals,
deregulate the tech sector slash consumer protections,
and allow tech companies to capture even more enormous profits
at the expense of everyday people.
So I've expanded the site to track the market.
both. It's now called Tech Influence Watch, and it documents more than $400 million and counting
in contributions from crypto and AI companies and their executives the selection cycle.
When two industries with shared backers and shared operatives are spending this much to write
their own regulations, someone needs to be watching. The site is live now at influence.
Citation Needed. News. Here's a little of what I found while building it. The AI industry is
fighting amongst itself. In New York's rapidly approaching 12th Congressional District primary,
two AI super PACs have spent nearly $10 million opposing each other. Think Big, backed by Andresen Horowitz
and Open AI through the Leading the Future Network, has spent $6.3 million trying to defeat
Alex Boris, who has made tech regulation a pillar of his platform. Jobs and Democracy Pack,
backed by Anthropic through the Public First Network, spent around 3.3.
$5 million supporting him.
The policy rivalry mirrors a corporate one.
OpenAI and Anthropic are two of the most prominent AI model developers, and direct competitors.
OpenAI's approach is essentially don't regulate us.
Anthropic, on the other hand, claims to champion, quote, AI safety and stricter regulations,
offering its policies and by extension its product as the responsible alternative.
While the companies and their respective super PACs frame the clash as a policy debate,
from the outside it looks far more like tug-of-war between competitors trying to yank the regulatory
environment in their direction.
But mostly, crypto and AI are coordinating.
While AI packs squabble, they're still spending far more often alongside crypto money in the same races.
So far, I've found 15 races where both industries are active, totaling 26.5 million.
The most common pairing is, unsurprisingly, Fair Shake and Leading the Future,
the crypto-N-A-I packs that share operatives and are both substantially backed by Andresen Horowitz.
Defend American Jobs, the Republican arm of the Fair Shake Cryptopac Network,
and American Mission, the Republican arm of leading the future, have spent together in seven races,
always backing the same candidate.
With Vlasto and Lahain running operations for both, it seems unlikely this is coincidence.
In most cases, the two packs simply support the same candidates, but in others, they split their
approach in ways that achieve the same outcome while obscuring the source of the money.
In Illinois's 2nd District, AI Money supported one candidate while CryptoMoney opposed their opponent.
The different tactics still work toward the same result, but masked the true scale of tech
industry money shaping a race that will impact the lives of the district's 730,000 residents.
The cryptocurrency industry's 2024 spending helped install at least six new pro-crypto senators
and more than a dozen crypto advocates in the House.
They defeated major regulatory and consumer protection advocates,
including Democratic Senate Banking Chair Sherrod Brown,
whose Republican opponent Bernie Moreno enjoyed $40 million in crypto super PAC support.
Since taking office, Moreno has used his seat on the Senate Banking Committee
to become one of the chamber's most aggressively pro-crypto voice.
voting for the Genius Act and co-authoring the Market Structure Discussion Draft that advanced the Clarity Act through the committee.
Since 2024, Donald Trump has received hundreds of millions of dollars in campaign contributions from crypto and AI companies and their executives.
Many of these same companies personally enriched him by more than $1 billion through business deals tied to his crypto ventures.
After his election, Trump staffed the White House with crypto and AI venture capital.
capitalists, giving the industry's direct access to policymaking at the highest levels.
He pushed for deregulatory legislation that would benefit these industries, and by extension,
his own businesses. Since then, we've seen at least 21 enforcement actions or investigations
against crypto companies dropped, and regulators who had pushed for consumer protections replaced with
Trump loyalists, who gutted the agency's regulatory capacity. Trump's crypto appointees have used
their influence to push forward ideas like a Bitcoin strategic reserve. Congress, itself also shaped
by hundreds of millions in industry spending, has refused to address Trump's blatant
crypto-related corruption, or provide meaningful investigations and oversight. Despite just how overt
Trump is being with these deals, most people have no idea of the quid pro quo that's happening.
Companies like Tron, Coinbase, Ripple, and Gemini have spent tens or hundreds of millions of
on campaign contributions, Trump issued crypto tokens, business partnerships that favor Trump and his family,
and donations to Trump's pet projects, from the East Wing Ballroom renovation to a military parade
sponsorships, and they immediately reaped the benefits.
SEC enforcement cases and possibly criminal investigations were dismissed or dropped.
Regulators reversed course on crypto oversight and have recently even begun working to vacate
completed cases from the previous administration. Financial authorities have issued national trust
bank charters and approved applications allowing these companies to expand into the traditional financial
system in unprecedented ways. The United Arab Emirates invested billions in ventures that benefit the
Trumps, including in the Trump family's World Liberty Financial Crypto project and via a $2 billion
investment denominated in the Trump family's stable coin. Soon after, they got the OK to purchase
restricted AI chips. Saudi Arabia partnered on a Trump crypto project, then received approval to
buy F-35 fighter jets, military technology they'd been denied out of fears it could end up in China's
hands. And the corruption isn't limited to just Trump. One of the key negotiators in these Middle East
deals is Steve Whitkoff, who is still not clearly divested from his financial interests in
World Liberty Financial, where his son remains an executive. What AI companies are hoping to buy?
AI companies are also spending heavily to shape policy around artificial intelligence, development, and regulation.
They're fighting local oversight and moratoriums that would give communities power to reject the resource-intensive AI data centers they increasingly oppose.
Some industry packs are working to block state or federal legislation that would impose stricter regulations on AI companies,
hold them liable for harms caused by their products, require safety assessments, or limit surveillance.
And while others, like Anthropic, through its public first network, claim to champion safety,
these efforts often serve to disadvantaged competitors rather than protect the public.
Both factions echo the crypto industry in framing their self-serving lobbying as principled advocacy
aimed at defending innovation, the public, or the country, while in reality a handful of well-funded
companies are working to shape regulations that would benefit their businesses at the expense of everyone
else. And most voters have no idea any of this is happening. In the next few weeks, voters in South
Carolina, Alabama, California, Georgia, and Oklahoma are heading to the polls and primaries where
crypto and AI super PACs are active, and most of them don't know it. And in every state,
crypto and AI companies and their executives have contributed directly to candidates. Most from
outside those states, with no offices or ties to the communities they're trying to influence.
Much of the industry spending is intentionally obscured through super PACs that run ads that don't mention the industry's funding them, or even the topics they're trying to address.
Candidates backed by crypto and AI money don't typically campaign on crypto or AI policy.
They run on other issues while quietly committing to industry-friendly positions.
In 2024, voters in Ohio never saw ads about crypto policy when Fairshake spent $40 million to defeat Sherrod Brown.
they saw ads promising that his opponent, Bernie Marino, would bring manufacturing jobs to the state,
and quote, stop illegal immigrants from taking Ohio's tax dollars.
By the time most people learned who funded the campaign, the election was over,
and Brown's crypto-friendly replacement was already being sworn in.
A recent Coin Desk survey found that 73% of voters disapprove of government officials having crypto business ties,
yet 55% weren't aware that the president is personally involved in the industry, and only 17% knew
he co-founded World Liberty Financial. These PACs are exploiting that gap, spending massive amounts
to install friendly politicians while hoping that voters won't wake up to who's funding these
campaigns and why. But when voters do learn about this influence, they often reject it.
In Illinois, both Giuliana Stratton in the Senate race and LaShawn Ford in the 7th District called out
the crypto industry's spending against them. Ford even wound up sending a cease and desist to
fair shake over an attack ad he alleges falsely portrayed him as corrupt, a convicted felon for bank fraud,
and someone who had abused his power in the Illinois state legislature. Both candidates ultimately
won their primaries, despite the millions in opposition spending that dwarfed their own fundraising.
I think this demonstrates that when voters know where the money is coming from, and candidates are
willing to challenge it, the industry's spending can become a liability rather than an advantage.
But the stakes are high. The scale of industry spending is fueling overt government corruption.
The deregulatory agenda their buying poses urgent threats to financial stability, consumer
protection, and democracy itself. In crypto, it threatens to destabilize our economy. We saw crypto
collapses in 2022, Teriluna, Celsius, Voyager, FTX, and others.
wipe out billions in customer funds, devastating everyday people who had bought in to the hype.
Those collapses happened under relatively light regulation, and the rules that existed were poorly enforced.
Regulators had the authority to act, but often didn't, allowing fraudulent operations to continue until they inevitably collapsed.
Now the industry has bought enough political influence to dismantle even what little oversight existed,
and is now hard at work pushing Congress to lock in that damage, hoping to block in that damage, hoping to block
future administrations from rebuilding the regulatory capacity they've gutted.
The end result could be a financial crisis that devastates individuals, families, and communities,
regardless of whether they invested in crypto or not.
The industry is lobbying for charters that let crypto companies access banking rails,
for permission to custody crypto assets alongside traditional securities,
and for crypto ETFs and other products that tie cryptocurrency prices to retirement accounts
and institutional portfolios.
The more these entanglements proliferate, the higher the risk that the next crypto crash won't
stay contained to crypto.
It could trigger contagion throughout the broader financial system, even requiring a 2008-style bailout
that costs billions in taxpayer money.
The same industry now dismantling oversight would be first in line, hands-out-stretched,
for a government rescue, and we've recently seen how this plays out.
In 2023, when Silicon Valley Bank collapsed, venture capitalist David Sachs took to Twitter to demand that the Treasury and Federal Reserve step in to protect the uninsured deposits of tech firms, which the government ultimately did.
Sachs now has a much more direct line than just tweeting. He's Trump's co-chair of the President's Council of Advisers on Science and Technology, and until recently, special advisor for AI and Crypto.
AI poses different but similarly serious risks, all flowing from the same basic problem,
companies capturing profits while the public bears the costs.
Unchecked AI development threatens to invade privacy, amplify surveillance,
perpetuate and systematized discrimination, and concentrate enormous power in the hands of a few companies.
The resource demands of AI data centers strain local infrastructure and energy grids,
often over the objections of the communities forced to host them.
And the rush to deploy AI systems without adequate safety testing
or corporate liability frameworks means the public bears the risk,
while companies capture the profits, immune from consequences for any harms they might cause.
Across both industries, we're watching companies spend hundreds of millions of dollars
to put their interests above those of everyday people,
who rely on their legislators to represent them on a range of issues far broader than just the tech
sector. And they're hoping to buy the right to harm people without facing consequences and to strip
away community's abilities to have any say in decisions that will affect their lives. That's why making
the public aware of this spending in real time matters more than ever. What's new? I've renamed
followed the crypto to Tech Influence Watch and significantly expanded it to track both cryptocurrency
and artificial intelligence industry spending. The site now documents more than 400,000,
million dollars in contributions from these two industries this election cycle,
ranging from industry super PAC activity to companies and their executives contributing directly
to candidates. If you're interested in one sector or the other, you can filter the view
to hone in on the information you want. The site tracks individual races, showing which candidates
are receiving support or opposition from which PACs and how much. It shows how the PACs operate
in networks and the companies that are funding them.
It shows which industries are active in which races and where their interests align,
and it updates in close to real time as new filings come in from the Federal Election Commission.
You can look up your own state, find your district, and see which races crypto and AI money is targeting near you.
Check candidates to see who's backing them, or explore individual companies to see where they're directing their political spending.
If you're heading to the polls soon, look at whether the candidates on your ballot are receiving
industry support, and if so, how much, and from whom?
Challenge them to put your interests ahead of their corporate backers.
Look up information about races in your friend or family states to send to them.
Send links to local journalists who can use the data to enhance the type of on-the-ground
reporting with contacts from their communities that they can do much better than I can.
For a great example of this, see Ryan Autignon at the Daily Northwestern,
who used Follow the Crypto Data to augment their coverage of Illinois Primates.
This launch is also part of a broader shift. I'm bringing more of my data work under the
citation-needed umbrella where it belongs. Tech Influence Watch is now explicitly a citation-needed
project, documenting tech industry behavior in real time as I provide the longer form analysis
and context in the newsletter you're reading right now. It only makes sense they live under one
roof given how much they support each other. The data projects give me the foundation for the
reporting you're reading, and throughout my writing I link back to them.
so you can dig deeper into the specifics.
And I have more accountability projects like this coming soon.
Why I'm doing this?
Voters don't want this.
Like CoinDusk's poll found,
73% of people disapprove of government officials having crypto business ties,
including about 60% of Republicans.
And like Illinois showed us,
when voters learned about the industry spending in their communities,
candidates opposed by the industry won,
despite all the money.
The problem isn't that voters,
are on board with this, it's that they don't know about it until it's too late.
That's the model these industries are counting on. It's the tech world's move-fast break things applied to politics.
But real-time documentation highlighting this influence could break that cycle,
and it makes industry spending visible before it's too late.
Voters can still act on it, candidates can address it directly,
journalists can report on it, and activists can organize against it.
The crypto and AI industries are spending
hundreds of millions of dollars to shape policy in their favor, and they have massive resources
to spend on lobbying, PR campaigns, and political influence. I'm one independent researcher
tracking all of it. Independent documentation of that spending is the only way to begin to counter
it, because documenting what these industries are doing requires infrastructure they can't
buy or influence. If you find this valuable, please consider supporting it. A subscription to citation
needed, at whatever amount works for you, keeps this work going. And if you know someone who needs
to see this data, a journalist covering these races, a researcher studying tech policy, a voter in one
of the targeted districts, send them to influence.citationneeded.news. Again, the industry is spending
hundreds of millions to write their own rules are counting on voters not knowing where the money
comes from or what it's buying. The goal of this project is to make sure they do.
Thanks for listening to this issue of the citation needed newsletter.
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