Tether’s friend in the White House

Published:


This is an on-site version of the White House Watch newsletter. You can read the previous edition here. Sign up for free here to get it on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Email us at whitehousewatch@ft.com

Good morning and welcome to White House Watch. Steff will be back in the saddle on Tuesday. For today, here’s what’s on deck:

  • Tether’s advocate in the White House

  • The US presidential transition and Syrian turmoil

  • Mitch McConnell’s anti-isolationist plan

An incoming member of the US government is one of the biggest backers of cryptocurrency tether, despite the fact that it has become the go-to digital asset for international criminals, according to law enforcement officials, prosecutors and recent indictments.

Howard Lutnick, Donald Trump’s pick to lead the commerce department, has fiercely defended Tether, which pulled $5.2bn in profits during the first half of 2024. Lutnick’s company, the broker Cantor Fitzgerald, took a stake in Tether while also managing a significant portion of its reserves on its behalf.

While speaking at a Nashville crypto conference in July, Lutnick pointed to Tether’s founder as one of the few industry players who could prove he was running a legitimate business. Yet among Tether’s users are sanctions evaders, drug cartels, North Korean hackers, and Iranian and Russian spies.
Tether has rejected accusations that it facilitates global criminal activity, pointing out that its use by criminals is so-called secondary market activity where bad actors trade its tokens between themselves.

It was actually shortly after Lutnick’s remarks in Nashville that he was named co-chair of the Trump transition team, a role that gives him sway over administration positions, including those that oversee crypto regulation. Trump has since nominated crypto advocate Paul Atkins to run the Securities and Exchange Commission. 

Meanwhile, tether also continues to feature regularly in international criminal cases. Law enforcement operations around the world have shown tether being used by groups including Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, Hamas and Hizbollah.

None of these concerns appear to have stopped Lutnick from hyping up Tether’s potential to transform global finance. He has defended Tether in a similar manner to the scrappy style that defined his rise in American finance and now politics.

Team 47: who’s made the cut

Trump announced Andrew Ferguson as his choice to replace Lina Khan as chair of the Federal Trade Commission.

Kari Lake, the TV anchor who had unsuccessful Senate run last month, was tapped for director of Voice of America. (AP)

The president-elect named his eldest son’s fiancée Kimberly Guilfoyle the US ambassador to Greece. (BBC)

He also chose private equity executive Tom Barrack to be ambassador to Turkey. (Politico)

Transitional times: the latest headlines

What we’re hearing

‘We’re in a very, very dangerous world right now, reminiscent of before world war two,’ said Mitch McConnell © Ethan Hill/Contour by Getty Images

Since stepping down as the longest-serving Republican Senate leader in US history, Mitch McConnell has zeroed in on his mission for the final two years of his term: serving as a bulwark against the isolationist wing of his party.

That puts him directly at odds with Trump and vice-president-elect JD Vance, who do not want the US to spend any more money on Ukraine.

“We’re in a very, very dangerous world right now, reminiscent of before world war two,” the 82-year-old said in an interview with the Financial Times. “Even the slogan is the same. ‘America First.’ That was what they said in the ’30s.”

McConnell is no fan of the once and future president. In a new biography of the Kentucky lawmaker, he called Trump “stupid” and a “despicable human being”. But in this must-read interview [free to read], McConnell shared, for the first time, that he voted for Trump last month — even if he couldn’t bring himself to speak his name, simply saying:

“I supported the ticket.”

One way McConnell could push back on Trump is through the Senate confirmation process for some of his controversial nominees. McConnell declined to show his hand in the interview, growing testy under questioning about defence secretary pick Pete Hegseth, who has faced sexual assault allegations.

“We’ll take each of the nominees as they come, and they’ll go through the vetting process,” McConnell said. “From an institutional point of view, each of these nominees will be treated like others have for a couple hundred years.”

When pressed about the Russia-friendly Tulsi Gabbard, who Trump named as director of national intelligence, McConnell responded:

“How many times do we have to say the same thing over and over again? You’re wasting your time and mine too.”

Viewpoints

Recommended newsletters for you

FT Exclusive — Be the first to see exclusive FT scoops, features, analysis and investigations. Sign up here

Breaking News — Be alerted to the latest stories as soon as they’re published. Sign up here



Source link

Related articles

spot_img

Recent articles