Another crypto-focused political action committee, the Defend Developers PAC, has joined the field of campaign-funding operations that have in recent years put the industry on the political map.
The new entrant won’t rival the sector’s leading super PAC, Fairshake, nor is it expected to jump to the scale of the mid-level committees that include the Fellowship PAC linked to Tether and the Digital Freedom Fund tied to Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss at Gemini. But it’s approaching the political field differently than others, by backing incumbent lawmakers who’ve already proven to be allies to its cause: the legal protection of crypto developers and creators of decentralized finance (DeFi) projects.
“We plan to raise and contribute more than six figures across dozens of key races in the midterms, because crypto technologists deserve champions in Congress who will go to bat for them,” said Gavin Zavatone, the PAC’s founder, in a Wednesday statement announcing the effort. Zavatone is also the policy lead at the DeFi Education Fund, a trade association that lobbies for DeFi-friendly policymaking.
Defend Developers — federally registered last month — is what’s known as a hybrid PAC, meaning it can make direct contributions to candidates that follow the Federal Election Commission limits as well as channeling unlimited corporate contributions into independent ads. The bulk of the crypto sector’s high-profile political intervention has been through super PACs that have no monetary limits, though another new PAC, the Blockchain Leadership Fund established by Anchorage Digital and Chainlink, is also a hybrid.
“As a hybrid PAC, we’re building the political infrastructure to ensure the United States remains the best place in the world to build blockchain technology freely — and we’re doing it the right way, powered by individual contributions raised directly from the founders, builders, and CEOs who have the most at stake,” Zavatone said. The board of directors behind him include members from Uniswap Labs, DEF and the Solana Policy Institute, though no dollar amounts have yet been disclosed about its initial funding.
Without the tens of millions deployed by Fairshake and its affiliates, a new crypto PAC isn’t likely to make major waves. Fairshake is coming away with its latest primary election wins this week, having backed nine Democratic U.S. House of Representatives candidates in California, one in New Jersey and Republican U.S. Senate Mike Rounds in South Dakota. All of them won their primaries on Tuesday, maintaining a high win record for crypto-supporting politicians that Fairshake bought independent ads for, though the PAC didn’t expend more than $476,000 (for U.S. Representative George Whitsides) on this week’s races.
Fairshake had expended $6.5 million in its successful effort to make sure veteran House lawmaker and crypto critic Al Green lost out to Christian Menefee in their Texas primary last week. However, the super PAC — one of the largest in U.S. politics — has also seen a few misfires, such as in Illinois.
The general election in November brings extremely high stakes, with the potential to shift the party majority to Democrats in at least one chamber of Congress.
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