A prominent government agency is reportedly rolling back its regulatory efforts concerning online betting markets and cryptocurrency, coinciding with President Donald Trump and his family’s increasing involvement in these rapidly growing sectors. The Trump family’s expanding influence has led to substantial financial gains, particularly from digital coin offerings and partnerships with prediction market platforms.
Donald Trump Jr. has emerged as a significant player, investing in the prediction market Polymarket through his investment firm, 1789 Capital, while also serving as an adviser for both Kalshi and Polymarket. Additionally, Trump Media & Technology Group, the president’s publicly traded media venture, forged a partnership last year with Crypto.com, launching an exclusive prediction market project.
Simultaneously, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), which oversees these sectors, has reportedly stepped back from enforcement actions. A recent report highlights concerns from agency staffers, who claim that recent firings within the CFTC have served as a stark warning to ensure a lenient approach toward companies under its jurisdiction.
The agency is currently functioning under the leadership of a single commissioner, Michael S. Selig, a 36-year-old former corporate lawyer with connections to crypto and prediction markets, appointed by Trump last December. With the president having left all four other commissioner positions vacant, the CFTC’s internal checks and balances have been significantly weakened, consolidating power in Selig’s hands.
Insiders suggest that even prior to Selig’s appointment, his predecessor, Caroline Pham, had already begun to compromise the CFTC’s oversight role to favor influential players in the industry linked to the Trump family. This shift marks a notable departure from the agency’s traditional focus on stringent enforcement, a sentiment echoed by Gretchen Lowe, a former senior enforcement official at the CFTC.
In the past 16 months since Trump returned to office, the CFTC has initiated only two cases involving digital currencies and one concerning prediction markets, targeting individual operators rather than larger tech companies. Reports indicate that at least five investigations into crypto firms have been abandoned, and prominent enforcement staff members have been pushed out.
Former CFTC trial attorney Andrew Rodgers highlighted the noticeable efforts to eliminate staff tied to significant cryptocurrency enforcement matters. The apparent erosion of the CFTC’s enforcement capabilities has seemingly benefited firms engaged in business with the Trump family. For example, when CFTC staff raised alarms about Crypto.com potentially providing large trading firms with an unfair advantage, Pham allegedly urged them to let the issue go and subsequently excluded them from discussions with the company.
Polymarket, which recently valued its operations at $9.6 billion—an increase nearly tenfold in just eight months—has also attracted significant investment linked to Trump Jr. In a controversial request to use intermediaries for betting, which could obscure insider trading, Polymarket was met with inquiries from CFTC officials about its anti-fraud measures. Following these discussions, key officials involved were placed on administrative leave or retired, further signaling a troubling trend within the agency.
As the CFTC, the White House, the Trump Organization, Polymarket, and Crypto.com have not provided responses to inquiries, the implications of these developments may significantly impact the regulatory landscape of online betting and cryptocurrency, raising questions about the integrity of oversight in these burgeoning industries.


