The principal policy executive asserted that the firm was “pleased to have contributed to the construction of a new assembly hall” in rebuttal to accusations of malfeasance leveled by an American legislator.
Faryar Shirzad, the principal policy executive at the American digital currency platform Coinbase, has refuted numerous assertions advanced by a U.S. legislator concerning connections to the Trump governance.
In a Thursday declaration on X, Shirzad issued a counter-statement to reproach from Connecticut Legislator Chris Murphy. Murphy had asserted on social media that Coinbase was considered a component in U.S. President Donald Trump’s “malfeasance operation” due to its contributions to the Fairshake political fund and its sponsorship of the 2025 induction ceremony.
The legislator established a clear linkage between the monetary contribution and the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) terminating a regulatory proceeding against Coinbase, a case which had been lodged during the preceding governance.
In rebuttal to Murphy’s allegation that Trump had sought a “sizeable contribution from Coinbase for [his] assembly hall,” Shirzad declared the firm was “pleased to have backed the construction of a new function room via the Trust for the National Mall,” further noting that numerous corporations had supplied capital to the endowment.
Shirzad additionally challenged the malfeasance assertions, stating that Fairshake is an unbiased political fund and that numerous public contributions have benefited prior induction ceremonies.
Trump first disclosed the scheme to erect a 90,000 square-foot assembly hall on the White House premises in July. He subsequently stated that the undertaking would entail a cost of approximately $200 million and would not affect the East Wing—the historic section of the edifice that accommodates the Office of the First Lady.
Nonetheless, photographs captured last week disclosed that the East Wing had been fully dismantled as a component of the assembly hall development, which is currently valued by Trump at an estimated $350 million.
“Note that we’re not the general contractor, so we’re not the right target if you’re unhappy about how the project is proceeding,”
Shirzad said in response to Murphy.
Both statements on social media were issued a few weeks following an emissary from Coinbase participating in a capital solicitation dinner at the White House benefiting the assembly hall endeavor. Other participants included the Gemini co-founders Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss and a delegate from Ripple Labs.
Coinbase refused to issue a statement concerning inquiries from regarding the sum the exchange had supplied to the Trust for the National Mall or the dismantling of the East Wing.
Is Coinbase Expanding Its Footprint in Washington Under Trump?
The assembly hall event did not represent the initial occurrence where Coinbase’s monetary participation via initiatives endorsed by the Trump governance propelled the firm into public scrutiny.
In June, the digital currency platform was visibly featured among the roster of financiers for a bicentennial commemoration of the U.S. Army, organized via a military procession coinciding with Trump’s birthday. Coinbase’s engagement was facilitated through a singular allocation to America250, an “impartial initiative” supporting a sequence of events for the United States’ semiquincentennial.
Coinbase Chief Executive Brian Armstrong lately paid a visit to legislators during a U.S. government cessation—which entered its 31st day as of Friday—to address pending statutes for the digital asset sector. The Republican hierarchy had intended for the proposed law, designated the Responsible Financial Innovation Act in the U.S. Senate, to initially emerge from committee review before the conclusion of October.
As the cessation persists with no resolution visible, nonetheless, it remains uncertain whether a digital asset statute will be considered a precedence within Capitol Hill.

