Welcome to the US Crypto News Morning Briefing — your essential rundown of the most important developments in crypto for the day ahead.
Grab a coffee because as the US government grinds deeper into shutdown, whispers from the West Wing hint at a strategic crypto move that could quietly redraw the lines of power between the digital asset sector and America’s financial regulators.
The White House is reportedly nearly naming Mike Selig, Chief Counsel on the SEC’s Crypto Task Force, as its nominee to lead the CFTC (Commodity Futures Trading Commission). The move that could reshape US crypto regulation just as Washington teeters on the edge of a record-breaking government shutdown.
Two people familiar with the matter told Crypto In America that Selig remains the top contender to replace contentious and former CFTC Chair Brian Quintenz, with formal vetting underway for additional commissioner roles.
The administration aims to rebuild the five-member CFTC and unify oversight between the SEC and CFTC amid intensifying calls for a cohesive digital asset framework.
“No one is better suited than Mike Selig to harmonize the CFTC and SEC on crypto and beyond,” said Stu Alderoty, Chief Legal Officer at Ripple.
Indeed, Selig may understand both sides of the regulatory fence and, with his background spanning both agencies, could finally reduce duplicative oversight.
A former CFTC clerk for Chris Giancarlo and advisor to SEC Chair Paul Atkins, he later served in private practice at Perkins Coie and Willkie Farr & Gallagher, advising on blockchain and token regulation.
Therefore, his nomination could pass as a crypto-positive signal, bridging the deep policy rift that has paralyzed the industry’s US growth.
“Glad to see the (hopefully) newly appointed CFTC is liked by those who are working for blockchain interoperability,” one user remarked.
Meanwhile, the potential nomination lands at a tense political moment. Kalshi prediction markets now price the shutdown lasting 34.7 days, signaling what could become the longest in US history.
The extended standoff has already halted policy momentum, delaying progress on key crypto and macro market updates.
Meanwhile, the third week of the shutdown has seen negotiations collapse over military pay and healthcare subsidies, and crypto markets rebounded modestly after last week’s derivatives-led selloff. Still, the longer Washington remains frozen, the greater the risk of delayed CFTC enforcement guidance, ETF reviews, and data releases critical for institutional traders.

