Crypto-Aligned Super PAC Reports $300K Ad Buy for Georgia GOP
Fellowship, which says it has over $100 million, reported a $300,000 ad disbursement for Republican Clay Fuller and posted endorsements for GOP candidates in five states.
Fellowship, a crypto-aligned super PAC that says it has more than $100 million, reported a $300,000 advertising disbursement for Republican Clay Fuller in Georgia. The filing with the Federal Election Commission lists the payment as disbursed on Tuesday. Fuller won a special election for Georgia’s 14th Congressional District to replace Marjorie Taylor Greene. The payment was reported about a month before Georgia’s Republican primary on May 19.
On Thursday the PAC posted endorsements on X for Republican candidates across five states. The endorsements named Alan Wilson for South Carolina governor; Blake Miguez for Louisiana’s 5th Congressional District; Mike Collins for the U.S. Senate in Georgia; Julia Letlow for the U.S. Senate in Louisiana; Pete Ricketts for the U.S. Senate in Nebraska; and Nate Morris for the U.S. Senate in Kentucky.
Fellowship announced its launch in September and said it had “over $100 million” from undisclosed backers aligned with the crypto industry. On April 1 the PAC named Jesse Spiro, head of government affairs at stablecoin issuer Tether, as chair. Fellowship described its goal as backing candidates with pro-crypto views.
Federal Election Commission rules allow super PACs to accept unlimited contributions from individuals, corporations, labor unions and other PACs for independent expenditures and other independent political activity. The $300,000 ad buy is the PAC’s only reported expenditure since it filed its statement of organization in 2025.
Crypto-aligned groups were active in the last election cycle. In 2024 the Fairshake PAC reported more than $130 million in media spending on congressional races. Fellowship is among several crypto-aligned outfits expected to direct spending ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
Lawmakers continue to debate federal rules for digital assets. The CLARITY Act, a market-structure bill that passed the House in July, has not advanced in the Senate. A reported plan for a Senate Banking Committee markup was not on the committee’s public calendar at the time of the FEC filing.
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