Fellowship PAC Launches with $100 Million Commitment
The new political group Fellowship PAC has launched with a $100 million commitment. Announced today in Washington, the group aims to keep America a leader in cryptocurrency, new technology, and transparency.
Fellowship PAC plans to support candidates who back innovation and can help the U.S. lead in digital assets and entrepreneurship. The group highlights concerns about unclear regulations, skilled workers leaving the country, and the need for stable rules.
It emphasizes transparency and trust, distancing itself from narrow political interests. On X, the Fellowship PAC stated: “Introducing The Fellowship PAC: launching with $100M+ committed to back pro-innovation, pro-crypto candidates—and keep America 1 in digital assets & entrepreneurship. Built on transparency and trust.”
Fellowship PAC’s Four Priorities
- Support candidates advocating predictable rules for digital assets.
- Protect America’s global advantage in innovation.
- Ensure fairness in the innovation economy.
- Prevent entrepreneurs from leaving the U.S. due to regulatory uncertainty.
The PAC aligns with the regulatory framework under President Trump’s administration. It aims to help crypto firms gain clarity and freedom to innovate within the U.S.
Growing Industry Support
Key industry figures reportedly back Fellowship PAC. The Winklevoss twins, co-founders of Gemini, and Coinbase are said to be involved, though no official confirmation exists.
In August, Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss donated $21 million in Bitcoin to a Republican-aligned PAC supporting Trump’s pro-crypto policies. Angel investor Naval Ravikant recently joined efforts through the Digital Freedom Fund PAC.
A Politico report states Ripple, Coinbase, Kraken, Circle, and Robinhood contributed over $160 million to Trump’s inaugural fund.
Meanwhile, Fairshake PAC has raised $141 million for the 2026 congressional cycle. This shows the rising influence of crypto-focused PACs in U.S. politics.
Fellowship PAC highlights cryptocurrency’s growing role in American politics. It places global competitiveness, innovation, and regulation at the center of policy discussions.