President Donald Trump’s nominee to lead the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Michael Selig, moved one step closer to confirmation on Thursday after the Senate Agriculture Committee voted 12–11 along party lines to advance his nomination.

The decision sends Selig to the full Senate for a closely watched confirmation vote, coming at a time when the agency is facing one of the most uncertain leadership periods in years and Congress is preparing to hand the CFTC sweeping new authority over the crypto sector.

 BREAKING: The committee advances the nomination of Michael Selig to serve as Chairman and Commissioner of the @CFTC to the full Senate.

— Senate Ag Committee Republicans (@SenateAgGOP) November 20, 2025

Senators Challenge Selig on CFTC Staffing, Independence, and Crypto Oversight Mission

The committee’s vote followed a fast-paced week in Washington, with Selig appearing before lawmakers on Wednesday for his first nomination hearing.

Senators pressed him on whether the CFTC is adequately staffed to take on its expanding role.

The agency currently has 543 full-time employees compared to 4,200 at the Securities and Exchange Commission, even as both chambers of Congress advance bills that would give the CFTC primary oversight of the crypto spot market.

Asked whether the agency needs more funding, Selig declined to commit, saying he would assess the situation once confirmed.

Several lawmakers also raised concerns about the agency’s political makeup and independence, noting that only one commissioner is currently seated.

Sen. Elissa Slotkin questioned whether Selig supports maintaining a balance of two Democrats and two Republicans on the commission and asked what advice he would offer the president in selecting future commissioners.

Great to meet with Michael Selig ahead of his @CFTC Chairman nomination.

We discussed focusing the commission on its core mission: protecting farmers through fair, transparent markets and also overseeing emerging digital markets.

As he agreed, it’s about putting farmers first! pic.twitter.com/sOEn7QBgnT

— Joni Ernst (@SenJoniErnst) November 18, 2025

Selig responded that the agency functions best when a range of viewpoints is represented and said his focus, if confirmed, would be on fulfilling the CFTC’s mission rather than political considerations.

Selig emphasized crypto policy as a central priority, aiming to support market growth while protecting consumers.

He said the CFTC should build a structure that allows developers to thrive and ensures that new exchanges adopt the safeguards expected in U.S. financial markets.

Committee Chair John Boozman said the CFTC needs strong leadership as Congress expands its authority and called Selig the right candidate, urging the full Senate to approve the nomination quickly.

The White House turned to Selig after withdrawing its earlier pick, former CFTC Commissioner Brian Quintenz, whose nomination unraveled following criticism from Gemini CEO Tyler Winklevoss.

The White House has searched for a new @CFTC chair after Brian Quintenz’s nomination stalled amid Winklevoss concerns. Possible picks include Michael Selig and Tyler Williams. #CFTC #crypto #Winklevosshttps://t.co/GAgvyhwGbm

— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) September 19, 2025

Quintenz later released private communications to clarify exchanges with the company and ultimately stepped out of the process in September.

Trump’s CFTC Pick Poised to Take Over as Agency Faces Deepening Leadership Crisis

Selig, chief counsel for the SEC’s Crypto Task Force, has been involved in the agency’s efforts to shape crypto policy.

As a lawyer, he previously advised blockchain clients in private practice and worked on digital asset matters in the office of former CFTC Chair J. Christopher Giancarlo.

His anticipated arrival comes as the CFTC continues to navigate a leadership crisis that began when Chair Rostin Behnam resigned in January after four years overseeing major actions, including the $4.3 billion Binance settlement.

Since then, the agency has experienced mass departures. Commissioner Kristin Johnson left in September, while Caroline Pham announced plans to exit for a role at MoonPay once a successor was confirmed.

CFTC faces leadership crisis as Johnson leaves, Pham joining MoonPay amid Quintenz confirmation delays.#CFTC #Cryptohttps://t.co/l2coYcGqkC

— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) August 27, 2025

Pham has remained the only active commissioner since early fall, leaving the five-seat panel barely functional and slowing policy coordination with Congress.

The leadership vacuum has intensified as lawmakers push forward bills that would reshape the agency’s mandate.

The agency is preparing to authorize leveraged spot crypto trading on regulated exchanges, a move set to fall under Selig’s purview if confirmed.

Selig has been outspoken about treating major tokens as commodities, once arguing that XRP is computer code rather than a security.

In an October post, he described the period as a promising moment for U.S. financial markets and pledged support for expanding domestic competitiveness in digital assets.

The post Trump’s CFTC Pick Clears Senate Hurdle — Caroline Pham’s Exit Imminent? appeared first on Cryptonews.

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