Kamala Harris’s softens Democrats’ stance on crypto, winning over some in Silicon Valley

It can no longer be dismissed as hearsay: Kamala Harris’ campaign is considering reconsidering the crypto question.

It started with a call to Bitcoin-loving billionaire Mark Cuban. Next: the invitaton to speak at Bitcoin 2024—an offer her team reportedly considered. Now, there are talks of meetings with digital asset behemoths Ripple, Coinbase and Circle. The message is clear: Kamala Harris’ campaign is reconsidering the crypto question.

Meanwhile, Silicon Valley is reconsidering her. While many tech figures had turned their back on Democrats during President Biden’s campaign, around 100 venture capitalists and founders have pledged their support to Harris—among them some crypto people.

So, it’s perhaps no surprise that among the 100-so venture capital investors, founders and tech leaders who signed their names on a pro-Harris pledge on Wednesday, are crypto people.

“We are pro-business, pro-American dream, pro-entrepreneurship, and pro-technological progress,” the signatories wrote, in a bid to rally Silicon Valley and the business community away from Donald Trump and J.D. Vance.

Trump has vowed to be the crypto president. As a result, the industry’s heavyweights have lined up to declare their support. Among them: a16z’s co-founders Ben Horowitz and Marc Andreessen, ARK Invest CEO Cathie Wood, Tesla CEO Elon Musk, and the Winklevoss twins, who founded crypto exchange Gemini. Meanwhile, crypto political action committees have spent over $28.5 million in support of crypto-friendly Republicans—and against skeptical Democrats—in the congressional races, according to OpenSecrets analysis of campaign data published of July 20.  

Here are the six crypto VCs who have pledged their support. 

Ron Conway

Conway is the managing partner and founder of SV Angel. The fund is an investor in at least ten crypto firms, including Coinbase, Uniswap, and OpenSea. “I have known Kamala for decades, and she’s been a fighter, a leader, and an advocate for the tech ecosystem since the day we met,” Conway posted on X. He’s also donated almost $450,000 to “Harris for President” as of the end of June, according to federal campaign data

Ryan Morrison

As a partner at Founders Circle Capital, Morrison has invested in Robinhood, the retail investing app that offers crypto services. More broadly, the firm is also an investor in digital assets prime brokerage FalconX. 

Rebecca Kaden

Kaden is the first female managing partner of Union Square Ventures. USV has 24 crypto firms in its portfolio, including Coinbase, Blackbird Labs, Dapper Labs and Polychain Capital. Kaden donated $4,000 to the Democratic candidates and committees last year.  

Mark Cuban 

An investor in 20 blockchain companies, it’s no secret that Cuban—worth $5.4 billion—has fantasized about Bitcoin becoming the “global currency.” Among his investments: Arbitrum, Polygon and DeepSea. Cuban is a staunch Trump critic; he’s questioned the benefits former president’s supposedly pro-business pledge to charge a 10% tariff on all imported goods, and accused Trump University of being a scam, according to an X post.

Reid Hoffman

LinkedIn’s co-founder, and partner at Greylock, has invested in six crypto firms, including Coinbase. In a 2014 blog post, Hoffman called Bitcoin “transformative” and “remarkable.” On Wednesday, he called supporting Harris “an investment in [our] democratic future.”

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