markdown The pro-crypto super PAC that promised a $100 million war chest for pro-Trump candidates has appointed Tether's VP of Regulatory Affairs, Jesse Spiro, as its chairman, signaling a renewed push ahead of the 2026 midterm elections despite having raised $0 to date.
"Transparency and trust is our differentiator," the committee said in its initial announcement, stating a mission to support candidates who back predictable rules for crypto and protect the nation’s competitive edge in technology.
Fellowship PAC filed its statement of organization with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) in August 2025 and publicly launched the following month with a pledge of over $100 million. However, its most recent filings show it has received no contributions and has zero cash on hand. The PAC's treasurer is Mitchell Nobel, a director at Cantor Fitzgerald, a firm that has handled assets for Tether and whose CEO, Howard Lutnick, was a key figure in the Trump administration.
The appointment of a senior regulatory executive from the world's largest stablecoin issuer marks the most concrete step by the PAC to date and suggests a focused effort to influence policy. It places Fellowship PAC in a more overtly partisan camp compared to the industry's largest spending group, Fairshake, which has amassed over $193 million while maintaining a more bipartisan public stance.
A Phantom PAC's New Voice
After its high-profile launch was met with silence in its campaign finance reports, the Fellowship PAC was largely considered a phantom entity. Reports noted the gap between the nine-figure pledge and the empty bank account, with one publication declaring the PAC "never arrived." The committee's website and social media presence have been minimal, with its most recent activity on X being a repost of Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino.
Spiro's appointment as chairman is the first significant activity from the group since its launch. His background in regulatory affairs at Tether, the issuer of the $112 billion market cap USDT stablecoin, suggests the PAC's objectives are deeply intertwined with shaping the legal framework for digital assets in the U.S.
Crypto's Growing Political War Chest
The move comes as the cryptocurrency industry's political spending reaches unprecedented levels. Pro-crypto entities have already directed at least $288 million toward the 2026 election cycle, more than double the entire 2024 cycle, according to research from "Citation Needed" reporter Molly White.
While Fairshake, backed by Coinbase and Ripple, remains the largest single PAC, a cohort of explicitly partisan, pro-Trump PACs like Fellowship and the Digital Freedom Fund have emerged. This reflects a strategic pivot by some industry players to align directly with the Republican party to achieve their deregulatory goals. Spiro's leadership of Fellowship PAC solidifies this trend, creating a direct channel of influence for a major stablecoin operator within this new political machine.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.



