President Donald Trump’s main advisor in Crypto, David Sacks, is working under a state of “special government employee” that must be for officials who serve an important but temporary duty with the federal government, and Senator Elizabeth Warren wrote a letter with other Democrats in Congress that asked him if that window is exaggerated.
Such an employee is not allowed to comply with more than 130 days in a year, according to the law, and the letter on Wednesday asks to put a number on the days that the prominent risk capitalist has worked for Trump in the role of cryptographic tsar and artificial intelligence. According to the rules, any day in which the work has finished counts against those 130, although in some agencies, the limit has commonly been governed by an estimate of “good faith” of how long the official hopes to serve.
“If you have worked every business day, its 130th was on July 25, 2025,” according to the letter signed by Warren and several other members of the Senate and the House of Representatives, including Bernie Sanders. The legislators called for their review of this timeline since the beginning of January 20 of the Administration a “investigation.”
“If you really approved the brand of 130, you are undermining the careful balance with Congress in the creation of the designation of SGE. It is only for its designation as an SGE for which it has been able to continue working and being paid by artisanal companies during their time in government,” said the letter.
Trump has used the temporary work state in a high profile manner, which also employs the CEO of Tesla Elon Musk in that capacity. The personnel tool is designed to use to contribute experience to the government without having to clean some of the bureaucratic rings of typical hiring. Earlier this year, other Democrats in Congress pressed a bill that sought to inhibit these employees to use the role to seek financial profits, and Warren also followed the legislation to limit SGE.
There have been more than 170 business days since Trump assumed the position. Since then, Sacks has been directing the aggressive Pro-Crypto Agenda of the President, which has so far celebrated a new important law to regulate the EE stable emitters. UU., Conded to a signature ceremony of the White House that Sacks attended.
He has also acted as the chief of the Administration Crypto Administration, who had originally been Bo Hines until he went to work for Tether as his best US executive. Patrick Witt replaced Hines as executive director of the President’s Council of Advisors on Digital Assets, and told Coendesk that he is still working closely with Sacks.