Republicans Are Now Investing in Crypto at a Higher Rate Than Democrats

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Pew Research Center data published June 8, 2026, drawn from a survey of 8,512 U.S. adults conducted at the end of January, shows 22% of Republicans have invested in, traded, or used crypto, against 17% of Democrats, a partisan divide that was statistically nonexistent before 2023 and exploded during the 2024 election cycle.

Republican crypto usage has climbed 6 percentage points since 2021, from 16% to 22%, while Democratic usage has flatlined at 17% across the same five-year span. Morning Consult tracking data shows the gap peaked in Q2 2025 at roughly 11 percentage points, 27.9% of Republicans versus 17.3% of Democrats had bought or sold crypto in the prior 12 months, before narrowing to approximately 5 points (23.6% vs. 17.7%) by early 2026.

The Trump crypto endorsement, the family’s memecoin and NFT ventures, and the White House’s stated ambition to make the U.S. the ‘crypto capital of the world’ are the primary attributed drivers.

The open question analysts must now resolve is whether Trump’s political crypto endorsement has permanently rewired partisan investment identity, or whether the gap narrows as Bitcoin adoption broadens and crypto becomes less politically coded.

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Republicans Crypto Adoption: What the Pew Partisan Gap Actually Reveals About Political Identity and Purchase Behavior

Context significantly enhances the raw figure. A 5-point gap between 22% and 17% looks modest in isolation, but the transmission chain from Trump’s political actions to measurable Republican retail investment behavior is specific and traceable, and the peak reading of 11 points in Q2 2025 is anything but modest.

The mechanism runs as follows: Trump signals approval of crypto as an asset class → Republican voters receive that signal as identity-consistent permission → crypto purchase behavior rises among a politically aligned retail base that previously had no stronger affinity for digital assets than Democrats.

Eli Yokley, U.S. politics analyst at Morning Consult, described the partisan gap as “massive, massive” and stated directly that it is nearly impossible to “de-couple” the rise of GOP crypto adoption from the Trump family’s embrace of the asset class. His framing was precise: “There’s no Obama coin. There are Trump coins and Melania coins.”

The specific Trump actions that functioned as permission structures for Republican retail investors are dateable. In 2022, Trump launched his first NFT collection, $99 digital trading cards featuring cartoon renderings of him in heroic postures.

The $TRUMP and $MELANIA memecoins followed, alongside the World Liberty Financial crypto venture, which debuted during Trump’s second term. The White House simultaneously pushed regulatory changes to allow crypto firms to become banks, operationalizing the ‘crypto capital’ framing as policy rather than rhetoric.

The ideological substrate was already present. Colin McLaren, head of government relations at the Solana Policy Institute, identified crypto’s foundational libertarian streak, “skepticism of centralized power and government solutions”, as ideological DNA that “maps more naturally onto the right’s instincts.” That pre-existing alignment made Republican voters a receptive audience once a high-status political signal arrived.

Rick Claypool, research director at Public Citizen, offered the counter-framing: crypto’s priorities of deregulation and withdrawn enforcement “always leaned toward corporate-friendly policies that are mostly, though not exclusively, associated with Republicans,” meaning the industry’s political tilt preceded and arguably invited Trump’s embrace.

The legislative pipeline reinforces the directional signal. The GENIUS Act, the stablecoin regulatory framework, was signed into law by Trump on July 18, 2025, passing the Senate 68–30 and the House 308–122. The broader CLARITY Act, which would give the CFTC primary jurisdiction over digital commodities including Bitcoin, passed the House 294–134 on July 17, 2025, and cleared the Senate Banking Committee 15–9 in May 2026, with only two Democratic yes votes.

Each legislative advance functions as a secondary demand signal for Republican retail investors already predisposed to view crypto as politically aligned.

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By Chris Williams

Chris Williams is a Senior Project Analyst and Investigative Journalist at ICOBench, specializing in tokenomics architecture and smart contract assessments. With a career spanning back to the 2017 ICO era, Marcus has conducted deep-dive due diligence on over 150 blockchain startups, focusing on distinguishing sustainable utility from market speculation.