What we are
Digital Future NH PAC is a state-registered political action committee in New Hampshire. We raise money, endorse candidates, and run independent voter-contact programs in support of policy that defends digital property, financial privacy, and the right to build new technology.
We are non-partisan. We will endorse a Republican, a Democrat, an independent, or a Libertarian on the same scorecard. The question isn't who you caucus with. The question is whether you'll defend self-custody, oppose central bank digital currencies, and protect the right of New Hampshire residents to hold and transact in digital assets without state-level interference.
What we aren't
We are not a token project. We are not a venture fund. We are not a lobbying shop for any single exchange, miner, or protocol. We do not take corporate-treasury contributions earmarked for specific bills. We don't run shadow campaigns for incumbents who quietly oppose us in committee.
We are also not a single-issue group. Crypto policy intersects with tax policy, banking law, telecommunications, energy policy, and privacy law. A candidate who is "pro-crypto" but votes for a state surveillance regime gets a poor score, full stop.
Why a New Hampshire PAC, specifically
Most "crypto policy" advocacy happens in Washington. That's where the SEC, CFTC, FinCEN, and Treasury sit. But the legal foundation of digital property — what counts as money, who can hold what, how contracts are enforced, when records are admissible, when miners can operate — is heavily state-level law.
New Hampshire is the right state to fight for it:
- No state income tax. No state sales tax. No state capital gains tax.
- The Cato Institute ranks New Hampshire #1 in economic freedom.
- The legislature is the third-largest in the world — 400 House members representing roughly 3,300 residents each. A citizen with a thoughtful position can actually be heard.
- NH was the first state in the nation to enact a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve law (HB 302, 2025, Chapter 4) and the first to grant DAOs legal personhood through a permissionless-blockchain registry (RSA 301-B:14, effective July 2025).
- The political culture — "Live Free or Die" — maps cleanly onto self-custody and code-as-property.
Put simply: it is easier to defend a strong policy stack than to build one from scratch. NH already has it. Our job is to keep it — and to recruit, fund, and elect people who will extend it.
How we score candidates
Every candidate we evaluate gets a written score on six pillars: self-custody rights, zero state taxation of digital-asset gains, opposition to CBDCs, the right to mine and run nodes, encryption and digital privacy, and smart-contract recognition under state contract law. Read the full framework on our issues page.
Scores are public. We don't issue private endorsements. If a candidate refuses to answer the survey, that goes on the record too.
How we operate
We comply with New Hampshire campaign finance law (RSA 664). We file disclosure reports on time. We disclose donors at the thresholds the law requires. We do not coordinate with candidate committees on independent expenditures.
We accept contributions in U.S. dollars and in BTC. Crypto contributions are valued at the spot rate at time of receipt and reported the same way as cash. Anonymous contributions above the legal threshold are returned.
Get in touch
Candidate? Donor? Reporter? Volunteer? Start here.