
Trump-branded crypto projects are being squeezed on several fronts, from a new lawsuit by Tron founder Justin Sun to a potential ethics clampdown in Washington and steep market losses at a key partner company.
World Liberty Financial, a Trump-linked crypto venture, has become the focal point of the pressure. The company is now being sued by Sun, while lawmakers debate adding language to the CLARITY Act that could block Donald Trump from earning money through crypto if he remains in office. Separately, Eric Trump’s profile has reportedly disappeared from the leadership section of Alt5 Sigma Corp’s website, even as that firm’s stock has plunged.
The Trump family reportedly generated about $1.4 billion from crypto-related activities in 2025, including token sales, memecoins and associated deals. Those earnings were described as helping offset losses in other parts of the Trump business empire. But the network of Trump-affiliated crypto projects, including World Liberty Financial, has since been thrown into turmoil.
On the legal side, court filings show Justin Sun is suing World Liberty Financial over frozen assets belonging to him and related entities. The complaint centres on the company’s decision to freeze those assets, and it was filed only after Sun resolved a separate case with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Sun’s relationship to Trump-linked crypto has already drawn scrutiny in Washington. He was a central figure in a letter from Democratic senators to the SEC that questioned a potential pay-to-play arrangement, focused on Sun’s large holdings of World Liberty Financial’s WLFI token and the TRUMP memecoin.
World Liberty Financial has also been criticised for borrowing stablecoins while using its own proprietary tokens as collateral. Observers have noted similarities between that structure and practices at FTX, the now collapsed and bankrupted crypto exchange.
Politically, the CLARITY Act represents a parallel threat to Trump’s future crypto earnings. The bill, designed to provide regulatory clarity for crypto tokens and related businesses, has been stuck for months amid disputes between crypto firms and traditional banks over yield on stablecoins. Democrats have pushed to attach ethics and corruption language to the legislation, specifically aimed at curbing profiteering tied to Trump’s time in office.
These proposed provisions are notable because many of the reported gains from Trump-linked crypto deals trace back to his presidency. That includes alleged corruption surrounding the pardon of former Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao, as well as the sale of 49% of World Liberty Financial to an entity based in the United Arab Emirates.
Republican Senator Thom Tillis has recently said he supports adding ethics measures to the CLARITY Act and suggested the bill is ready for a hearing. Industry observers believe the law would likely need to pass before the upcoming November midterm elections; a strong Democratic result in those races could make it harder for future crypto-friendly legislation to advance.
Prediction market Kalshi currently places the odds of the CLARITY Act being signed into law this year at 46%, signalling a near coin-flip outlook on whether the package and any attached ethics restrictions will actually reach the president’s desk.
Alt5 Sigma Corp, another company tied into the Trump crypto ecosystem, is facing its own turbulence. The firm’s stock is down roughly 85% over the past year. According to reporting cited in the source material, Eric Trump was recently removed from the leadership page of Alt5’s website, after his role had already been reduced late last year. At the time of writing, the leadership page appears to be offline.
Alt5 Sigma operates as a digital asset infrastructure provider and had previously announced plans to purchase $1.5 billion worth of WLFI tokens for its treasury, linking its balance sheet directly to the Trump-linked token. The combination of a collapsing share price and the change to its public leadership listings adds another layer of uncertainty to the wider Trump crypto network.
The political scrutiny is not confined to Trump-affiliated projects. Democrats have also sent a letter to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick over a perceived conflict of interest involving Tether, the issuer of the USDT stablecoin. The concern focuses on a loan that Tether provided to a trust connected to the Lutnick family, raising questions about overlapping public and private interests around one of crypto’s most systemically important stablecoins.
Meanwhile, the broader crypto industry is grappling with what the source describes as a “crisis of purpose,” largely driven by how centralised power has revealed itself to be across supposedly decentralised platforms. Tether recently froze USDT assets linked to the Iranian regime, underlining that major stablecoins can be effectively backdoored and controlled by their issuers or by government authorities overseeing them.
Other projects and networks have also leaned on centralised interventions in response to hacks. The layer-2 platform Arbitrum, for example, has used centralised mechanisms to reimburse users who were hit by exploits. These moves have prompted renewed debate over whether the long-standing “code is law” ethos in crypto still holds or whether it ever did in practice.
Despite the governance and ethics controversies around stablecoins and token platforms, the underlying narrative for bitcoin as permissionless, apolitical money remains active in some geopolitical contexts. The source notes Iran’s reported preference for bitcoin in the Strait of Hormuz as one example of how the original cryptocurrency continues to function as a censorship-resistant settlement instrument on the global stage, even as much of the surrounding crypto ecosystem drifts toward more traditional, centralised structures.
With a lawsuit, potential ethics carve-outs in flagship U.S. crypto legislation, and sharp market declines at a key partner company, Trump-linked crypto ventures now sit squarely at the crossroads of regulation, politics and market risk.
Source: Gizmodo
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