Warren urges Trump to file 2026 crypto disclosure by July 23
Sen. Elizabeth Warren asked President Trump to voluntarily file his 2026 crypto disclosure by July 23 after his 2025 filing showed $1.4 billion in crypto earnings.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren asked President Donald Trump to voluntarily submit his 2026 crypto financial disclosure by July 23 in a letter sent Thursday. The request follows Trump’s 2025 disclosure, filed June 30 under an Office of Government Ethics requirement, which reported $1.4 billion in crypto-related earnings between Jan. 1 and July 15, 2025.
The 2025 report listed proceeds tied to the Official Trump memecoin, TRUMP, and revenue linked to the family firm World Liberty Financial. The president is not required to file his 2026 annual report until May 2027, but Warren requested the earlier submission to allow lawmakers and the public to review potential conflicts before the Senate considers the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act.
Warren wrote that the president’s financial disclosure “raises key questions about the appropriateness of Presidents, Vice Presidents, senior administration officials, members of Congress, and their families profiting off the crypto industry,” and added that “[w]ithout adequate guardrails, [CLARITY] would turbocharge the President’s significant conflicts of interest and almost certainly boost the value of his and his family’s crypto holdings.”
Trump defended earning income from crypto while in office during a July 2 interview, saying there was “nothing illegal” and “nothing wrong” with profiting from crypto investments as president. The White House and Warren’s office did not provide immediate comment.
The CLARITY Act, which would define regulatory roles for digital assets and reshape market structure, passed the House in July 2025 and is now pending in the Senate. Senate Majority Leader John Thune has indicated the Senate will vote on the bill before lawmakers leave for August state work periods. If the Senate approves the bill with changes, it would return to the House.
Several Senate Democrats have said they will not support the measure without explicit ethics provisions addressing conflicts involving elected officials and their families. On Friday, the House Financial Services Committee’s Subcommittee on Digital Assets, Financial Technology, and Artificial Intelligence held a field hearing on CLARITY in New York City. Representative French Hill, chair of the full committee, attended and described the bill as a bipartisan priority; no Democratic members appeared at the hearing.
Warren’s letter seeks detailed disclosure of the specific crypto earnings reported for 2025 and requests the same level of detail for 2026 so lawmakers can assess potential conflicts while the Senate finalizes debate on the bill.
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