Coinbase Rates Politicians On Crypto-Friendliness Ahead Of U.S. Midterm Elections
2022.09.15 10:38
© Mundo Crypto PR Coinbase Rates Politicians On Crypto-Friendliness Ahead Of U.S. Midterm Elections
Coinbase, a popular American publicly traded company that operates a cryptocurrency exchange platform, has released a new feature of a scorecard for politicians, assessing each one of them on their political friendliness.
Brian Armstrong, co-founder and CEO of Coinbase (NASDAQ:), tweeted, “Starting today, Coinbase will begin integrating our crypto policy efforts right into our app. These will help our 103M verified users get educated on the crypto positions held by political leaders where they live.”
1/ Starting today, Coinbase will begin integrating our crypto policy efforts right into our app. These will help our 103M verified users get educated on the crypto positions held by political leaders where they live. pic.twitter.com/3GqWZIioZQ
— Brian Armstrong (@brian_armstrong) September 14, 2022
From now on, American customers can check crypto sentiment scores for members of Congress based on their past statements. The App also allows users to register to vote and find out about local town hall events.
Armstrong said, “Over time, we want to help pro-crypto candidates solicit donations from the crypto community (in crypto). We’ll also expand to get more geographic coverage in global elections and add data on various candidates running for office (not just current elected officials).”
According to a Bloomberg analysis, millions of crypto-backed dollars are going into the coffers of federal candidates and committees ahead of November’s congressional elections. Donations from the crypto industry at the federal level have surpassed oil and gas, transportation and defence industries from January 2021 through July.
Criteria For Rating Congressmen
According to the crypto scorecard, each member of Congress was assessed based on their public statements and public actions with respect to cryptocurrency policy. Each grade was derived solely from publicly available information.
Giving an insight into how the scoring works, Coinbase revealed that members are assigned positive or negative points based on their performance in each category, and the resulting total score determines their overall grade. The categories are-
- Sponsored and/or co-sponsored legislation;
- Positive or negative public statements; Selected cryptocurrency votes;
- Positive or negative cryptocurrency-related op-eds,
- Positive or negative cryptocurrency Congressional letters;
- Crypto-caucus membership;
- And their willingness to host crypto-focused events and accept crypto donations to their campaigns.
However, the App was only able to provide grades for half of the U.S. Senate and less than a quarter of the U.S. House of Representatives “due to lack of action from members.”
“The high number of incomplete grades demonstrates the need and the opportunity for more members of Congress to engage on cryptocurrency policy in the future,” said Coinbase. “Congress needs to help secure our economic future by supporting crypto and the millions of Americans who are already investing in digital currencies.”
Meanwhile, many candidates have expressed support for crypto publicly. Recently, U.S. senatorial candidate for New Hampshire, Bruce Fenton, extended his support for publicly. Fenton tweeted his public statement: “People choose what money is. We should separate money and state the way we separate church and state. I support the right of anyone to use any form of money they choose. I choose Bitcoin as my preferred money. The US dollar is a melting ice cube.”
On the Flipside
- Coinbase continues to be involved in a probe by the U.S. SEC over its staking programs.
Why You Should Care
The latest move indicates, that Coinbase seeks to play an active role in shaping the regulatory environment for the digital assets industry. It recently launched a voter registration tool and took a high-profile stance against the Treasury Department’s decision to sanction coin mixer Tornado Cash by backing a lawsuit filed by two Coinbase employees and others. Coinbase has also spent $1 million on lobbying in the second quarter, a record amount for the company, and launched a political action committee in February to pool donations from employees and donate to members of Congress.
Know more about Coinbase’s voter registration initiative:
Coinbase Launches Voter Registration & Education Initiative Ahead of November Election
Read about how Coinbase funded Lawsuit against the U.S. treasury:
Coinbase To Fund Lawsuit Against U.S. Treasury Over Tornado Cash Sanctions
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