THE CRYPTO PRIMARY — Miami’s Republican Mayor Francis Suarez just took a big risk on his future. He also entered the presidential race today. Recent history, with its bumper crops of presidential primary candidates, shows that there’s little downside in mounting a longshot Oval Office bid. Losers often walk away with consolation prizes like cabinet posts or cable news gigs. Recent history has been less kind to cryptocurrency, and to those who bind their fortunes too closely to it, as the digital assets market crashed last year, exposing a series of spectacular frauds along the way. Suarez is among those bound to it. He tied his personal brand and Miami’s to crypto by aggressively boosting the technology during its last bull run — and he continues to embrace the technology as he steps onto the national stage. He’s not “running away from Bitcoin,” his spokeswoman Soledad Cedro, told POLITICO this morning during a brief interview in which she also revealed she had taken a leave of absence from the mayor’s office to work on his presidential bid. Indeed, at the Bitcoin 2023 conference in Miami last month, Suarez was bullish as ever . The mayor, who currently takes his salary in Bitcoin, the original cryptocurrency, suggested he would continue to do so if elected president. He also announced that he was borrowing against the six Bitcoin he’s accumulated in salary — now worth approximately $150,000 — to secure a mortgage on an investment property. (It was revealed last month that Suarez was also making $10,000 a month consulting for a developer. The news led to the opening of an ethics probe, and the Miami Herald reported last week that the arrangement is now the subject of an FBI investigation .) Suarez’s public gestures generated more buzz at last year’s conference, when crypto markets were riding high and the mayor unveiled a robotic “Bitcoin bull” statue, a symbol of the city’s ambitions to become a high-tech financial capital. Back then, pro-crypto politicians could count on the support of colorful crypto moguls and an army of enthusiastic small-time investors. Today, the highest-profile mogul, Sam Bankman-Fried, is indicted, while many of his peers are embattled. Legions of investors have taken hits to their savings. And Suarez, even if he’s not running away from crypto, has had to temper his rhetoric, at least in some contexts: “We would recommend choosing multiple industries to champion to create a stronger local economy of companies and investors,” he told me in April, in response to written questions. “Miami’s brand is tech and innovation, which is broader than just the crypto industry.” Despite all this, as Suarez enters the 2024 presidential fray, he doesn’t even have the “crypto candidate” lane all to himself. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed an industry-friendly state law last year, before signing a measure last month that restricted the use of central bank digital currency in the state. (A CBDC, whose existence at this point remains merely hypothetical, would amount to a digital upgrade of the existing dollar system, and is vehemently opposed by crypto boosters). That’s helped DeSantis earn the support of pro-crypto tech investors like venture capitalist David Sacks, who is helping the governor raise money. Over in the Democratic primary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has embraced Bitcoin, trashed CBDCs, and won the endorsement of former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, who is now working full-time to create a Bitcoin-centric vision of the Internet at his payments firm Block. Dorsey told me on Sunday that he is set to make contact with Kennedy’s campaign this week. Even in the “young, ethnically diverse, longshot Republican candidate” lane, Suarez faces pro-crypto competition from publicity-savvy executive Vivek Ramaswamy, who, like Kennedy, also spoke at last month’s Bitcoin conference. All of this suggests that crypto regulation and broader questions about the future of money are creeping their way onto the 2024 agenda. Whether Suarez’s fortunes will rise or fall by riding that next leg of the crypto roller-coaster is another matter, but it’s a risk the Miami mayor is apparently willing to take. Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Tonight’s author Ben Schreckinger covers tech, finance and politics for POLITICO; he is an investor in cryptocurrency. You can reach him at bschreckinger@politico.com or on Twitter at @SchreckReports .
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