Crypto Updates

38% of US voters will consider candidates’ position on crypto in midterms: Survey

38% of US voters will consider candidates' position on crypto in midterms: Survey


Roughly a third of eligible voters in the United States will be “considering crypto policy positions” when choosing candidates in the 2022 midterm elections, according to a new survey.

In the results of a 2,029-person survey conducted by The Harris Poll between Oct. 6-11, 57% of likely midterm voters said they would be more likely to vote for a political candidate interested in staying informed about cryptocurrencies, while 38% said they would consider positions on crypto policy when voting in the midterms. The survey, initiated by Grayscale Investments, also suggested crypto regulation was a bipartisan issue, with 87% of Democratic and 76% of Republican respondents saying they wanted clarity from the U.S. government.

“Voters and lawmakers alike have been hearing about crypto, and it seems they’ve taken the opportunity to learn about the asset class,” said the Grayscale summary. “Despite political divisions, the survey found broad familiarity with crypto across party lines and a majority of both Republicans and Democrats who agree that crypto represents the future of finance.”

Early voting for the U.S. midterms has already begun in many states, with Election Day set for Nov. 8. The future majority control of both the House of Representatives and Senate hangs in the balance with a number of issues driving many voters to the polls, including abortion, gun control, free and fair elections, and those on the economy — including crypto.

Speaking to Cointelegraph, North American head of business development at digital assets platform OSL Jeff Howard suggested that many may consider digital assets as part of financial inclusion efforts, but the space largely wasn’t big enough to appeal to single-issue voters in the United States:

“I don’t think crypto has seeped into the psyche of American voters as much yet. In every topic or every issue, you have a hardcore group that supports or a group that is against, but I don’t think crypto in and of itself as a one-issue vote has gotten big enough to matter yet.”

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