Senator Elizabeth Warren has sent a letter to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) chairman Michael Selig on Monday, demanding documents related to the agencyβs handling of cryptocurrency and prediction market regulation amid what she called βunprecedented presidential corruption.β
In the letter, Senator Warren, the top-ranking Democrat on the Senate Banking Committee, pointed to a New York Times investigation that described the CFTC as having been βsteamrolledβ by the industries it is supposed to police. She then gave Selig until June 18 to respond to the letter with a full account describing all internal records supporting key regulatory decisions, communications between the agency and prediction market firms, as well as all staff departures.
Staff cuts amid expanding interests
Since January 2025, the agency has laid off almost 25% of its staff. Also,enforcement actions dropped from 58 in fiscal year 2024 to 11 in the period since President Donald Trump took office. The senatorβs core argument in the letter revolves around the mismatch between this shrinking CFTC workforce and its growing responsibilities.
βA CFTC with fewer staff members, reduced enforcement activity, and expanded responsibilities is a recipe for disaster,β Warren wrote. βIt leaves the public even more vulnerable to bad actors and our financial system even more fragile.β
Congress is advancing the Clarity Act, which would hand the CFTC primary oversight of most digital assets, further expanding the agencyβs responsibilities. Warren argued that the financial watchdog cannot absorb that responsibility in its current state.
Political ties draw CFTC scrutiny
Warren also tied several recent CFTC decisions to financial relationships between the Trump family and regulated firms. She cited reports that the agency approved a Polymarket request following an investment by a firm connected to Donald Trump Jr.
She also criticized chairman Selig for asking a federal judge to throw out a $5 million penalty against Gemini, the exchange founded by the Winklevoss brothers, who each donated $1 million in Bitcoin to Trumpβs reelection campaign.
Warrenβs letter also referenced former commissioner Brian Quintenz, who was initially in line to lead the CFTC before his nomination was revoked. Text messages released during that process showed Tyler Winklevoss pressing Quintenz to prioritize a Gemini complaint and offering to βraise this issue with the president himself.β Quintenz refused, and Selig was then nominated in his place.
βTaken together, these are concerning signs of a CFTC beholden to political pressures and interests of the wealthy insiders, unbound by the rule of law and failing to protect investors and market integrity,β Warren wrote in her letter.
Industry reaction
Market macro analyst and co-founder of Coin Bureau, Nick Pukrin, told Decrypt that the core problem in the conversation is institutional trust, not uncertainties about the agencyβs leanings regarding crypto. βA regulatory agency that isnβt impartial canβt be trusted to make decisions for the greater good of everyone,β he noted.
Markus Levin, co-founder of XYO, also argued that the problem runs deeper than just workforce numbers and headcount. βIf the CFTC is going to take on expanded authority under the Clarity Act, it needs people who actually understand blockchain technology, not just the traditional derivatives playbook,β the co-founder told Decrypt, as reported by Yahoo Finance.
Chairman Seligβs response to Senator Warrenβs letter is due June 18.
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