warren s crypto regulatory strategy

Despite the widespread crypto market focus on Trump-related tokens, Senator Elizabeth Warren has turned her regulatory crosshairs toward PancakeSwap. In a December 15 letter to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Attorney General Pamela Bondi, Warren isn’t pulling punches. She’s demanding answers by January 12, 2026. Perfect timing, really, as Senate crypto bills stall into next year.

Warren’s not subtle about her concerns. PancakeSwap allegedly laundered $260 million from the Bybit hack – money tied to North Korea. No KYC, no registration, just swapping tokens like it’s nobody’s business. National security threat? You bet, says Warren.

The plot thickens when you follow the money. Over 90% of USD1 stablecoin trades happen on PancakeSwap. And USD1? That’s World Liberty Financial‘s baby – the Trump family’s main crypto project. Convenient coincidence? Warren doesn’t think so.

She’s painting a pretty clear picture: PancakeSwap ran liquidity incentives for WLFI-linked tokens. They partnered with WLFI in June. Warren is particularly concerned about the decentralized exchange structure that allows users to swap tokens without traditional financial oversight. Now the Senator wants to know if Trump’s regulators will go soft on enforcement because of those connections. Talk about an awkward position for the new administration.

Warren’s letter demands lists of actions to prevent conflicts in crypto enforcement decisions. She’s basically daring them to ignore the Trump family ties. Her message? DeFi services should face the same rules as traditional finance. The “decentralized” excuse isn’t cutting it anymore.

The timing couldn’t be more interesting. John Deaton, XRP’s lawyer, is running against Warren in 2026. The crypto community sees this as another Warren attack on innovation. Warren’s political strategy leverages existing legislative inaction to strengthen her position on regulatory oversight. Markets might get spooked.

Meanwhile, PancakeSwap hasn’t officially responded to the allegations. WLFI denies any wrongdoing or conflicts. But Warren’s trap is set – Trump’s regulators must either crack down on a platform connected to the president’s family or risk proving Warren’s point about selective enforcement.

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