A landmark Supreme Court ruling that hands President Donald Trump sweeping new powers over independent federal agencies is now casting a long shadow over crypto regulation in the United States — and the timing could hardly be more consequential.
The case that triggered this ruling started when President Trump fired Rebecca Slaughter, a Democratic commissioner at the Federal Trade Commission. The Supreme Court sided with Trump in a 6–3 decision, establishing that the president holds broad authority to remove leaders of independent federal agencies — essentially collapsing the legal firewall that had long shielded those regulators from direct White House control.
The one meaningful carve-out: the Federal Reserve remains protected. Every other major independent regulator now falls within reach of the president’s removal power.
That distinction matters enormously for financial markets. The Fed’s insulation was preserved precisely because its monetary independence is treated as a structural economic necessity. But agencies like the SEC and CFTC, which operate on a different legal footing, no longer enjoy the same protection — and both are currently in the middle of reshaping the rules governing digital assets.
The ruling lands at a moment when both agencies are actively rewriting the rulebook for the crypto industry. The SEC is tailoring its approach to digital asset securities, while the CFTC is fielding broader authority as Congress considers landmark legislation that would formally divide oversight of digital assets between the two regulators.
Neither agency is at full strength right now. The SEC has three Republican commissioners and no Democratic members — already a departure from the bipartisan design that Congress intended. The situation at the CFTC is even more stark: Chair Michael Selig is currently the only commissioner at the agency, making it a de facto single-member body for the time being.
Both agencies were designed to cap same-party commissioners at three, creating a built-in requirement for ideological friction. That friction, in theory, produces better-tested rules. Right now, that design is not functioning as intended.
There is an important legal counterweight to consider. The Administrative Procedure Act still governs how federal agencies develop and issue rules, including notice and comment procedures. As long as an agency follows its governing statutes and the APA, its rules carry the full force of law — regardless of how many commissioners voted in favor.
“As long as commissions are following their statutes, which may or may not require a certain number of commissioners for a quorum, and as long as they’re following the APA, then anything they are doing is legal and has the full force of the law,” a former CFTC official told The Block.
That legal clarity, however, does not resolve the political durability problem.
The deeper worry among former agency officials and industry observers is not legality — it is longevity. Rules passed by a full, bipartisan commission are much harder to reverse. They carry the implicit legitimacy of debate across political lines. Rules passed by a single commissioner, or an ideologically uniform panel, are easier to attack when the political winds shift.
“I’m a firm believer that more minds and more debate and more friction of ideas will lead to better outcomes,” one former CFTC official said. “So, as they’re going through this, perhaps we get a suboptimal outcome because you have fewer people at the table thinking through the issues.”
The concern is concrete. Without bipartisan cover, rules become targets. “It becomes an easy target for an ideologue or an opponent to say, well this really wasn’t debated thoroughly so we should go back to the drawing board,” the former official added.
The same official pointed to a striking hypothetical: had this ruling been in place during the previous administration, Republican SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce — who has been central to clarifying the agency’s crypto rules — might not have survived at the agency under a Democrat-led removal regime. “Imagine the loss of intellect, feedback, and accountability if Hester wouldn’t have had a voice,” they said. The implication runs both ways: in a future administration hostile to crypto, the ruling could strip out exactly the voices that hold agencies accountable.
The Supreme Court’s decision also raised questions given Trump’s direct financial stake in the crypto sector. His financial disclosure, released by the Office of Government Ethics, revealed hundreds of billions of dollars in bitcoin and ether through his family’s crypto company, World Liberty Financial.
Tyler Gellasch, president and CEO of the investor-focused Healthy Markets Association and a former counsel to Democratic SEC Commissioner Kara Stein, framed the stakes bluntly. “The President has been very clear about his positions on crypto and prediction markets, whether through executive orders, statements, negotiations with Congress, or his own personal business activities, so it’s fairly safe to assume regulators will follow that lead,” he said.
But Gellasch also flagged the long-term risk embedded in this regulatory moment. “Politics, like markets, are cyclical,” he said. “And the more the political winds are at the back of crypto today, the more likely the industry is to face political hurricanes in the future.”
That observation cuts to the heart of what this ruling actually means for the crypto industry’s long-term regulatory stability. A sector that benefits from concentrated executive influence today is also one that becomes acutely exposed the next time a hostile administration takes office — and now has fewer institutional safeguards standing in the way. The CFTC vacancy problem is especially pressing given that Congress is actively weighing legislation that would hand the agency significantly greater authority over digital assets. Lawmakers have already pressed Trump to fill those seats specifically to advance that broader crypto bill. Whether the White House moves quickly on appointments — or leverages the vacancy as its own form of control — may define the regulatory trajectory for digital assets more than any single rule.
The Supreme Court ruled 6–3 to expand the president’s authority to remove leaders of independent federal agencies, with the Federal Reserve as the sole exception.
It could affect the composition and durability of commissions involved in crypto rulemaking, possibly reducing bipartisan debate, increasing political influence over agency decisions, and making rules easier to reverse under future administrations.
Full commissions promote healthy debate, bipartisan rule adoption, and more durable regulations that hold across different administrations. Without diverse viewpoints, rules are more vulnerable to reversal and less likely to reflect thorough deliberation.
No. As long as agencies follow the Administrative Procedure Act and their own statutory requirements, their rules carry full legal force regardless of how many commissioners participated in the vote.
Article produced with the assistance of artificial intelligence and reviewed by the editorial team.

