
A group of US Senate Democrats is pressing Senate Republicans to open hearings into a reported $500 million investment that links a Trump-linked crypto firm to Abu Dhabi royalty, arguing the transaction could raise national security and conflict-of-interest concerns.
In a letter sent Tuesday, the lawmakers urged Republican leadership—who control the Senate’s committee system and set whether hearings move forward—to call witnesses from the Trump administration and to investigate whether the reported deal between the Trump family’s crypto company and a UAE-backed investor influenced decisions made by the president or his officials. The letter also points to broader concerns that the administration has weakened crypto enforcement.
Key takeaways
- Senate Democrats want immediate Senate hearings into a reported $500 million UAE-linked deal involving Trump family crypto interests.
- The lawmakers are asking for testimony from Trump administration officials “under oath” regarding the investment and related developments.
- They cite national security worries, including concerns that sensitive technology could be accessed by China after a major UAE arms and chip agreement.
- The letter links the investigation request to claims that the administration has loosened crypto compliance and enforcement efforts.
UAE investment into Trump-linked World Liberty Financial under scrutiny
The push follows reporting that an Abu Dhabi investment company backed by Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan—an adviser to the United Arab Emirates’ national security apparatus—signed a deal in January 2025 to purchase a 49% stake in World Liberty Financial, a crypto platform associated with President Donald Trump, according to the Wall Street Journal as referenced earlier by Cointelegraph.
The Democrats’ Tuesday letter treats the reported transaction as more than an ordinary business arrangement. It argues that Congress should examine both the investment details and whether the deal affected subsequent actions by the president and the administration.
According to the letter, the senators are “deeply concerned” about what the UAE may receive—or may have already received—“at the expense of US national security.” They also argue that Congress must investigate whether the reported investment influenced decisions taken by President Trump.
National security concerns extend beyond crypto
The lawmakers point to additional context involving the UAE and the US administration. In May 2025, the Trump administration agreed to a major arms and artificial intelligence chip deal with the UAE, a development the senators said occurred “despite concerns raised by US national security officials that China could access the chips.”
President Trump has previously denied awareness of the World Liberty Financial deal, according to coverage referenced by Cointelegraph, which cited Trump’s position that he was not aware of the arrangement.
For the Democrats, the combination of a reported UAE investment in a Trump-connected crypto platform and a subsequent US-UAE technology and defense agreement is the heart of the scrutiny. Their central question is whether there is an asymmetry in benefits—whether the UAE may have obtained preferential access or other advantages in connection with both economic and strategic ties, even if the president says he was unaware of the crypto transaction.
Claims about weakening crypto enforcement fuel the call
Beyond the specific investment, the letter also ties the investigation request to what the senators describe as steps to weaken enforcement in the crypto sector. The Democrats cite concerns about actions such as exempting crypto service providers from certain financial services regulations and disbanding the Justice Department’s crypto enforcement team.
The senators—Elizabeth Warren, Richard Blumenthal, Gary Peters, Dick Durbin, and Ron Wyden—appear to be arguing that congressional oversight is needed not only to evaluate potential foreign influence around a high-profile crypto entity, but also to determine whether enforcement posture changes have reduced deterrence or oversight at a time when the sector’s regulatory and compliance framework is evolving.
Previous Democratic probes and pressure campaigns
This request is part of a broader pattern of Democratic scrutiny around World Liberty Financial and Trump-linked crypto interests.
Earlier this year, Cointelegraph reported that Senate Democrats urged the Treasury Secretary to determine whether the UAE stake should be reviewed under the Committee on Foreign Investment (CFIUS) framework, pointing to the possibility that foreign investment could implicate national security concerns. That push, according to prior coverage referenced by Cointelegraph, specifically urged Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to assess whether the deal warranted a CFIUS probe.
Democrats have also raised questions about how regulators have handled enforcement decisions in the crypto space. Earlier coverage referenced by Cointelegraph described senators pressing Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Paul Atkins concerning the decision to drop a fraud case involving Justin Sun, a major backer associated with World Liberty Financial.
Separately, lawmakers have pursued investigations beyond crypto investment ties. In May, Democratic Senator Peter Welch and Representative Dave Min launched a probe into Trump’s pardons, including the pardon of Binance co-founder Changpeng Zhao. That inquiry came after Binance accepted a $2 billion investment from an Abu Dhabi fund in early 2025 and agreed that the funds would be paid in World Liberty Financial’s stablecoin, USD1.
Taken together, the new letter suggests Democrats intend to keep pressure on the oversight agenda—moving from regulatory enforcement questions and transaction scrutiny toward potential connections between foreign investment, presidential decision-making, and enforcement posture changes.
What to watch next
The next step hinges on whether Senate Republicans agree to schedule hearings and, if so, what specific questions committees will put to Trump administration officials and other witnesses about the reported UAE investment, related communications, and the administration’s enforcement decisions. With the national security and conflict-of-interest concerns now being formally framed as matters for congressional investigation, the key uncertainty is whether oversight will expand beyond allegations into documented evidence and official timelines.
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