Trump
accused of ‘disgusting’ greed after being paid over $2bn since return to office
Elizabeth
Warren and colleagues demand tighter rules on political figures’ crypto
dealings, citing disclosures of large-scale Trump family profits
Joseph
Gedeon in Washington
Wed 1 Jul
2026 17.23 CEST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jul/01/trump-accused-one-billion-dollars-crypto-venture
Donald
Trump has again been accused of “brazen crypto corruption” after financial
disclosures revealed his family’s cryptocurrency ventures generated more than
$1bn in his first year back in the White House.
A
927-page disclosure, released on Tuesday by the US Office of Government Ethics,
showed that the US president had been paid more than $2.2bn last year in total,
from real estate, golf resorts, branded merchandise, licensing deals and court
settlements.
But a set
of extraordinary crypto takings stood out: World Liberty Financial, a joint
venture between the Trump family and that of Trump’s Middle East envoy, Steve
Witkoff, brought in more than $500m from sales of “governance tokens”, while
another firm, CIC Digital LLC, generated more than $600m from Trump-branded
meme coins, launched days before his second inauguration.
Elizabeth
Warren, the top Democrat on the Senate banking committee, said the figures
showed why the US Congress needed to act.
“The
crypto legislation heading to the Senate floor must prevent the president,
vice-president, senior administration officials, members of Congress, and their
families from profiting off the crypto industry,” said Warren. “If it does not,
it will only turbocharge Donald Trump’s brazen crypto corruption.”
Juliana
Stratton, the Illinois lieutenant governor and a Democratic Senate candidate,
wrote on social media that Trump’s “infinite greed is disgusting”, adding:
“Donald Trump uses the office of the president to make billions while American
families struggle to afford their basic needs.”
Gavin
Newsom, California’s governor, said the disclosures “showed exactly” how Trump
played his crypto cards, noting that many investors had lost out. “He got
richer,” said Newsom. “His crypto supporters got rug-pulled.”
“The most
corrupt president in American history,” said Minnesota governor Tim Walz, the
2024 Democratic vice-presidential nominee whom the Trump administration has
targeted aggressively with fraud investigations into the state’s social
programs.
Asked
about the disclosures on Wednesday, Trump waved off the scrutiny. “I made a lot
of money before I became president,” he told reporters. The White House has
long maintained Trump’s businesses are walled off from his official duties and
run by his adult sons. It did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
In his
second term, the president and his family have invested heavily in digital
money and crypto businesses, with Trump announcing at the start of last year
that he wanted the US to be the “crypto capital of the world”.
Trump
also made millions last year from selling Trump-branded Bibles, trainers and
other small items, in another unprecedented move for the presidency. In the
Trump-branded watches category alone, the president received $4.7m.
The rise
of crypto relative to Trump’s property is especially noteworthy given the
president racked up tens of millions from fees and licensing deals in a flurry
of new hotel, resort and condo deals overseas. Many of those countries were
negotiating with the US over tariffs, military aid and other important matters.
A
property in the United Arab Emirates took in $10.4m; one in Saudi Arabia being
built by a real estate developer close to the ruling family sent the
president’s company $9m; and one in Bucharest, Romania, and another in Qatar
each sent Trump $5m.
The
disclosure report also detailed payments of more than $86m to the president
from five separate legal settlements with media and social media companies
including ABC, CBS, YouTube, Meta and X.
The
latest disclosures add to a string of controversies over the Trump family’s
crypto dealings. In June, the Ultimate Fighting Championship said it would pay
fighter bonuses in USD1, a stablecoin issued by World Liberty Financial, at a
mixed martial arts event staged on the White House’s South Lawn for the
president’s birthday. (World Liberty was an official sponsor of the event.)
Congressional
Democrats want a fuller reckoning. Warren’s staff reported last week that
officials linked to the United Arab Emirates invested roughly $500m in World
Liberty Financial, after which the administration took at least 10 actions
benefiting the UAE, including on AI chip exports – an arrangement Warren has
called a potential “pay-to-play” scheme.
She and
four other senators wrote to Senate committees on 23 June demanding hearings
into the deal, under which associates of an Abu Dhabi royal bought a 49% stake
in World Liberty Financial for roughly half a billion dollars four days before
Trump’s inauguration. Separately, Adam Schiff, a US senator, is leading an
inquiry into the crypto exchange Binance over reports it evaded US sanctions on
Iran, citing Binance’s ties to World Liberty Financial.
Not every
effort to curb the US president’s crypto dealings has succeeded. An amendment
barring the president, vice-president and Congress members and their families
from owning or promoting crypto businesses was voted down by the US Senate
banking committee along party lines, even as the underlying Clarity Act
advanced.
The
scrutiny landed just before Trump took his first flight onboard the new Air
Force One, a Boeing 747 gifted to the US by Qatar, en route to North Dakota for
the dedication of the Theodore Roosevelt presidential library, which he called
the “best plane ever built”.

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