April 12, 2026 ChainGPT

Tether-Linked Super PAC Pays $300K to Firm Co-Founded by Tether US CEO

Tether-Linked Super PAC Pays $300K to Firm Co-Founded by Tether US CEO
Headline: Tether-linked super PAC makes first move — $300K ad buy paid to firm co-founded by Tether US CEO A crypto-aligned super PAC long teased as a major political spender has made its first reported expenditure: roughly $300,000 for advertising routed through Nxum Group, a firm co-founded by Bo Hines — the former Trump crypto adviser who is now chief executive of Tether US. What happened - Fellowship, the super PAC that has been publicly associated with Tether since its announcement last year, disclosed an independent expenditure to the Federal Election Commission showing the payment to Nxum for advertising tied to Georgia Republican Clay Fuller’s campaign. The filing arrived days after Fellowship named Jesse Spiro, vice president of regulatory affairs for Tether US, as its chairman on April 1. - The expenditure was reported as an ad buy for Fuller’s primary race and coincided with his special-election victory to replace Marjorie Taylor Greene. Because it was an independent expenditure, the PAC says it acted without coordination with Fuller’s campaign. Connections and responses - Nxum’s founders have included Bo Hines, his father Todd Hines and a third partner; earlier federal ethics filings listed Hines as among the owners while he served in the White House as executive director of the President’s Council of Advisers on Digital Assets. - Fellowship has billed itself as “rooted in transparency” and said it will back candidates supportive of emerging digital-asset technology. The PAC’s feed on X has started listing Republican endorsements, including a South Carolina gubernatorial candidate, Alan Wilson. - Tether International told reporters it has “no affiliation or oversight over Fellowship PAC.” Tether US did not answer further questions; the PAC also did not respond to CoinDesk inquiries about its funding or the payment that benefited a company tied to the Tether US CEO and his relative. Is this self-dealing? - Experts note there’s no blanket prohibition on political committees paying firms connected to their founders or officers so long as the services are bona fide and priced at fair-market value. Michael Beckel of Issue One said that self-dealing is permitted under those conditions. Background on Nxum and Bo Hines - Nxum previously made headlines for a $1 million billboard contribution supporting MAGA Inc. in 2024. Hines left the White House after helping advance the 2025 stablecoin law and later joined Tether as part of its U.S. push. It is not publicly clear whether Hines still has financial ties to Nxum today. - The PAC’s treasurer, Mitchell Nobel, is an executive at Cantor Fitzgerald, a firm that manages assets for Tether’s global operation and was previously led by Howard Lutnick before his government service. Where the money is — and isn’t - Fellowship announced last year that it would be established with pledges totalling $100 million, but FEC records currently show the PAC’s bank accounts at zero and do not yet disclose the source of any large contributions. Federal filings often lag behind real-money movements, so further disclosures could follow. - Tether US’s own stablecoin, USAT, remains small by market standards — roughly a $37 million market cap — raising questions about the PAC’s funding sources if it intends to deploy sizable sums. Context and implications - Fellowship’s initial $300,000 outlay is modest next to the spending of established crypto super PACs such as Fairshake, which has already spent millions on early primary contests. - With midterms under way and control of the House and Senate still competitive, the crypto industry is jockeying to build political allies. So far Fellowship’s visible support has been aimed at Republican, deep-red candidates; if Congress shifts toward Democrats next year, the industry may need bipartisan support to protect favorable legislation. Bottom line Fellowship’s first disclosed ad buy shows the PAC is now active and spending — and that its financial ties intersect with people who have moved between the White House, crypto advocacy and Tether. Questions remain about where the PAC’s promised funds will come from and whether future disclosures will show broader or more bipartisan activity as the 2026 midterms approach. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news