Trump and the Libertarian case for crypto – Fortune

Theres nothing surprising about a presidential nominee addressing a party convention ahead of an electionunless, that is, the party is not the one theyre leading. Thats why it was curious to read of former President Donald Trump, the current head of the GOP ticket, addressing the Libertarian party convention on Saturday.

Trump did not exactly win over the crowd, which booed him repeatedly. Still, the appearance was a shrewd political move since, as Trump himself noted, the Libertarian party regularly pulls in 3% on Election Day, and winning over even a few of those voters could make the difference. Trump also used the event to tout his recent conversion to crypto, telling the crowd he would keep Elizabeth Warren and her goons away from your Bitcoin and promising to commute the sentence of drug kingpin Ross Ulbricht (a.k.a. Dread Pirate Roberts) on his first day in office.

These remarks reportedly elicited loud cheers, which is not surprising given that libertarians have supported crypto since day one. This includes the Free State crowd that helped make New Hampshire an early hotbed of Bitcoin, and Erik Voorhees, the radical libertarian who built the influential OG crypto projects Satoshi Dice and ShapeShift.

The libertarian viewas best as I can make it outis that the government has no business in any part of our lives, aside from national defense, and that society should be organized entirely around private contracts and the free market. Its a compelling idea. After all, many of us would like to live our lives with less meddling from government-backed factions of the progressive left and the religious right. Alas, the libertarian vision also feels unworkable in this day and age. Do we really want to leave things like highways, schools, policing, and pollution entirely to the market? Ditto with crypto.

Its neat in theory to imagine a world where anyone can mint and circulate their own currency. But the reality is the government has a legitimate interest in preserving the supremacy of the U.S. dollar. History teaches us it rarely ends well when a countrys leaders can no longer control its money supply. In this context, Trumps recent words should be viewed as simple political pandering rather than a decision to go full-metal libertarian on crypto or anything else.

I look forward to hearing about more of this at Consensus in Austin, where Ill be interviewing Tom Farley, former NYSE president and current Bullish CEO. The annual crypto confab will also feature a keynote speech from Voorhees, and a political debate between Trump convert Ryan Selkis and Uniswaps top lawyerand staunch DemocratMarvin Ammori. If youre on the ground, come say hello.

Jeff John Roberts jeff.roberts@fortune.com @jeffjohnroberts

A Nigerian judge adjourned the trial of Binance executives till June as one defendant, a U.S. citizen, is suffering severe malaria. (Reuters)

A recent series of raids on forex shops in China suggests crypto trading is still very active despite an official ban. (Bloomberg)

Ethereum-based memecoins PEPE and MOG hit all-time highs as some traders turn to them as a proxy bet to ride the latest ETF hype. (CoinDesk)

Caitlyn Jenner's X account is promoting a new memecoin named after her, though the news has been met with concern about hacks and deep fakes. (The Block)

Bitcoin prices dipped as trustees of the Mt. Gox exchange, which filed for bankruptcy in 2014 following a massive hack, finallybegan returning billions to former customers. (Bloomberg)

How America votes now?

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Trump and the Libertarian case for crypto - Fortune

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