Durbin pointed to the dissolution of the department’s specialized crypto enforcement unit in April 2025 as a turning point that allowed Trump to generate an estimated $1.4 billion from digital asset projects. The senator further alleged that former Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao funneled a $2 billion investment into Trump-linked entities prior to receiving a presidential pardon, characterizing the administration’s crypto dealings as fundamentally compromised. Trump has consistently denied any wrongdoing regarding his digital asset business activities.
Beyond the nomination, a coalition of Senate Democrats including Chris Murphy, Jeff Merkley, and Chris Van Hollen is leveraging the debate to demand stricter ethics safeguards in pending crypto legislation. Murphy argued that the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act should not proceed without enforceable rules preventing public officials from profiting from the industries they regulate. Blanche, who previously held over $159,000 in digital assets before transferring them to family members, defended his tenure by citing a shift away from what he termed regulation by prosecution. While he pledged to review the Binance pardon process if confirmed, he maintains that federal prosecutors should avoid targeting software developers who do not knowingly facilitate criminal activity.

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