Fellowship PAC filed its Q1 2026 report with the Federal Election Commission on 15 April 2026, disclosing $11 million in receipts against a publicly claimed $100 million war chest 1. Cantor Fitzgerald, the US investment bank that acts as custodian of the dollar reserves backing Tether, gave $10 million in January. Anchorage Digital, a federally chartered crypto bank, gave $1 million. The remaining $89 million of the public claim remains unsupported by federal records.
The donor identities matter more than the gap. Tether is the world's largest stablecoin issuer, running USDT pegged to the US dollar; its dollar reserves sit with Cantor Fitzgerald. Fellowship PAC's treasurer Mitchell Nobel is Cantor's director of digital asset strategy. Its chair Jesse Spiro is Tether's head of government affairs. Bloomberg and CoinDesk reported that Fellowship's ad buys were routed through a firm founded by Tether's US chief executive, a connection the filing does not explain 2. The PAC has already spent $850,000 on Kentucky Senate candidate Nate Morris, $350,000 on Nebraska Senator Pete Ricketts, and $300,000 in the Georgia 14th runoff closed on 7 April .
The structure closes a loop around the CLARITY Act (Digital Asset Market Structure bill), the legislation that would establish the US regulatory framework for stablecoins. The bank that custodies Tether's reserves funds the PAC chaired by Tether's government-affairs head, and the PAC spends on senators who will vote on the bill that writes the rulebook for Tether's business. The CLARITY Act markup remains stalled into late April , which means the senators whose campaigns Fellowship is funding have not yet delivered the regulatory outcome. The broader crypto super-PAC layer is already deployed: Fairshake holds $171 million cash against end-2025 claims of $193 million and raised only $1.2 million in January and February . Fellowship is building a second channel into the same campaign window.
