By Tyler Warner
5 min read
Morning Minute is a daily newsletter written by Tyler Warner. The analysis and opinions expressed are his own and do not necessarily reflect those of Decrypt. Subscribe to the Morning Minute on Substack.
GM!
Today’s top news:
The President’s crypto ties once again have the broader industry’s legislative push in hot water.
Senator Chris Murphy (D-CT) accused President Trump of “brazen, open corruption,” alleging the UAE secretly funneled $187M to Trump family entities via World Liberty Financial just days before his inauguration, then received restricted AI chip access in return.
Senator Murphy alleged “potentially criminal conduct” tied to a $500M deal where UAE-backed Aryam Investment purchased 49% of World Liberty Financial four days before Trump took office.
Per WSJ reporting, roughly $187M flowed to Trump family entities and $31M to special envoy Steve Witkoff’s family, shortly before the administration greenlit expanded UAE access to advanced AI chips that Biden had restricted.
This all happened while the White House hosted a two-hour crypto summit Monday with Ripple, Coinbase, Kraken, Tether, Circle, and major banks to negotiate stablecoin yield provisions in the CLARITY Act.
No deal was reached, but the administration set a February deadline for compromise.
“That is corruption. Those are the elements of a bribe. This is potentially criminal conduct,” Murphy said on the Senate floor. He warned that “the rule of law is coming back” and that those involved “are going to jail.”
Trump told reporters Monday he was unaware of the investment: “I don’t know about it. My sons are handling that. My family is handling it, and I guess they get investments from different people.”
A World Liberty Financial spokesperson flatly denied any connection: “Any claim that this deal had anything to do with the Administration’s actions on chips is 100% false. The leftwing media is dishonestly pushing baseless innuendo.”
So where does this leave us?
The crypto market structure bill that’s supposed to bring regulatory clarity is now caught in the middle of a new partisan battle.
Democrats are tying passage to anti-corruption provisions targeting Trump’s crypto businesses.
Banks are still clinging to the stablecoin provisions as a deal breaker.
And the UAE scandal is providing ammunition to anyone who wants to slow things down.
For markets: Regulatory uncertainty isn’t going away.
The bill that was supposed to provide a “foundational framework” by Q1 is now hostage to partisan warfare.
Now we wait to see if the administration can separate Trump’s personal crypto ventures from the industry’s legislative priorities…
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