Ripple Co-Founder Among Kamala Harris’ New Corporate Endorsers+ tite

Chris Larsen’s endorsement comes as Ripple has emerged as one of the biggest donors in the 2024 U.S. elections, though his choice may be at odds with the company CEO’s support of Senate Republicans.
Ripple Co-Founder and Executive Chairman Chris Larsen is among the 88 corporate leaders who endorsed Vice-President Kamala Harris to be the future president of the United States in a letter.

Crypto companies have been very active in the current U.S. presidential election run, building a $169 million war chest at the Fairshake PAC, for which Ripple is one of the top contributors.

Apart from Fairshake, Ripple has sought to combat at least one prominent Democrat, and CEO Brad Garlinghouse has contributed to a PAC favoring Senate Republicans.

Ripple Co-founder and Executive Chairman Chris Larsen is among the 88 corporate leaders who endorsed Vice-President Kamala Harris to be the next U.S. president in a letter on Friday, revealing potential differences among company leaders.

While Larsen joined, other high-profile CEO’s come from the likes of review site Yelp, cloud storage company Box and social media platform Snapchats Snap and more, according to the letter CNBC was first to report, Ripple and CEO Brad Garlinghouse have targeted prominent Democrats in their campaign contributions.

The majority of the company’s contributions have gone to pro-crypto super political action committees (PACs) like the Fairshake political action committee, which is focused on getting crypto-friendly candidates elected from both major parties. Ripple Labs has been among the chief backers of Fairshake and its affiliates, giving about $48 million to influence the 2024 elections.

While the industry’s combined effort has tried to walk a tightrope between the two major political parties, Ripple’s giving has leaned into the Republican side in one key situation: trying to defeat crypto critic Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) Garlinghouse, the company’s CEO, has also personally given $50,000 to a super-PAC aimed at building a Republican majority in the Senate, according to disclosures to the Federal Elections Commission. So his political sympathies may be at odds with the letter Larsen signed, which favors a Democratic administration under Harris.

The letter argued Harris would “continue to advance fair and predictable policies that support the rule of law, stability, and a sound business environment.”