As prediction markets gave House Democrats a 75% probability of winning back the majority in 2026, Representative Maxine Waters — the top Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee — formally requested SEC Chairman Paul Atkins testify about a pattern of enforcement withdrawals that she argues have left crypto investors exposed and undermined the agency's legal obligations.
If Democrats prevail in the midterms, Waters would assume the chairmanship of the committee that oversees the SEC, transforming her requests into demands backed by subpoena power. Her early and aggressive positioning on crypto enforcement signals that a Democratic-controlled House would re-examine the Atkins-era's regulatory retreat with considerable scrutiny.
Waters' letter to Atkins catalogued what she characterized as a systematic abandonment of enforcement responsibilities. According to the letter, the SEC terminated or stayed major cases against Coinbase, Binance, and Justin Sun's Tron ecosystem — firms she argues "had been credibly accused of major violations" of federal securities law. Particularly striking, Waters contends that some companies announced case terminations before the SEC had formally voted to close them, suggesting Atkins' office played an unusually active role in negotiating settlements outside normal commission procedures.
Beyond the substantive enforcement concerns, Waters raised a procedural objection that carries significant legal weight. She argued that the SEC's approach — using staff statements and informal guidance rather than notice-and-comment rulemaking to effectively rewrite its crypto enforcement posture — violates the Administrative Procedure Act. APA violations can expose agency actions to judicial challenge, potentially unwinding the enforcement deferrals that crypto firms have relied upon to launch new products.
"The Commission's approach flouts its legal obligations under the Administrative Procedure Act by using staff statements rather than formal rules, limiting public comment opportunities and concealing the influences on policy decisions."
— Representative Maxine Waters, letter to SEC Chairman Paul Atkins