“For the past four years, crypto has been a very dirty, dirty word in Washington,” said Frank Chaparro, a podcast host and investor who is attending the ball.
“What we’re experiencing on Jan. 20 is a monumental change in tone and approach from the government,” said Chaparro, who expects to see friends from all over the country at the soiree. “This is a huge deal.”
Trump, a onetime crypto skeptic who claimed bitcoin “seems like a scam,” is now an evangelist. He has pledged to establish a “strategic national bitcoin stockpile” and has nominated lawyer Paul Atkins, a critic of the Securities and Exchange Commission’s crypto policies under President Biden, to run the agency.
The industry is also celebrating what Brian Armstrong, CEO of the cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase, has called “America’s most pro-crypto Congress ever,” courtesy of millions spent by super PACs and billionaires. Coinbase, blockchain company Ripple, and venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz were the biggest donors to the pro-crypto super PACs.
Sacks, Trump’s right-hand crypto man, is founder and partner at venture capital firm Craft Ventures and a member of the so-called PayPal Mafia, an influential alumni network from the payment technology company that includes billionaires Peter Thiel, Reid Hoffman, and Elon Musk.
These days, though, he’s better known for his involvement in the “All-In” tech and politics podcast. Over the summer, Sacks hosted a fundraiser for Trump at his Pacific Heights mansion that brought in a whopping $13 million from ultra-wealthy Silicon Valley conservatives.
While the galas might be crypto’s official entrée into the establishment, there was a common complaint among attendees: Despite the several-thousand-dollar price tag, no dinner is provided. One attendee said she planned to grab a burger beforehand.