The conflict regarding cryptocurrency regulation in the U.S. has cracked open the door to a decisive moment. As midterm elections draw near, the Republicans are striving to gain policy victories while they still have the majority in Congress. A long-expected market structure bill that would finally clarify the US policy on the rapidly expanding cryptocurrency sector is the main focus of that effort.
According to Patrick Witt, the executive director of the President’s Council of Advisors for Digital Assets, the bill is unavoidable. Nonetheless, timing is the key factor. He maintains that it is not realistic to think that the cryptocurrency can keep running without explicit rules. To him, the lawmakers should perhaps do so albeit with hard and difficult trade-offs.
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The bill presented in the Senate is directing towards clarifying the significant roles played by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) along with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in the regulation of crypto markets.
However, developments have been slow. Committees that are in charge of both agencies postponed their scheduled markups to gain bipartisan support, which is indicative of the fact that the votes are not yet safe.
Some of the top industry figures are dissatisfied. Some of the provisions are considered too much of a limitation, particularly the ones regarding stablecoins and decentralized protocols. The CEO of Coinbase has, in fact, recently taken back his endorsement of the legislation and remarked that a no bill position is better than a bad one.
Attorney Witt was very contrary to this opinion. He pointed out that the industry’s current stance is only because of a pro-crypto administration and cautioned that waiting could result in much worse scenarios.
Witt implored the lawmakers and the industry to make concessions in order to get the necessary 60 votes in the Senate. He reasoned that a future Congress, which might be dominated by Democrats, would probably want to impose greatly stricter rules on the crypto sector. “The situation,” as he somewhat implied, should not obstruct the way forward.
His urgency is backed by the political calculations. The whole House and 35 Senate seats will be up for election in November. Although the Republicans are likely to keep their majority in the Senate, polls and betting odds indicate that the Democrats have a strong chance of winning back the House. Even a split Congress could slow down the Trump administration’s non-crypto reforms including the one on crypto.
At this moment, the Republicans are still carrying the cards. They are backed by the White House, regulators who are friendly, and a thriving digital asset sector. Witt thinks this cooperation is going to be short-lived.
The approval of a cryptocurrency framework now, no matter how flawed, would give the industry immunity from prolonged uncertainty at least for years. In the capital, postponement usually means loss. For cryptocurrencies, the time is very much against them.
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