The U.S. Senate's Cryptocurrency Market Structure Bill Faces Deadlock Due to Tight Schedule After weeks of bipartisan negotiations, the legislation on the cryptocurrency market structure in the U.S. Senate has made little substantive progress. Democrats have submitted a new counterproposal, accepting parts of the Republican framework but insisting on major reforms in financial stability, market integrity, national security enforcement, and public officials' digital asset conduct. These disagreements indicate that there is no consensus within the Senate on the bill's core regulatory framework. Key contentious issues include digital asset disclosure, secondary market protections, tools for identifying and curbing illegal finance, compliance obligations for decentralized platforms, and limits on stablecoin yields. Democrats are also pushing for strict ethical standards to prevent elected officials from profiting through cryptocurrency projects, a point closely linked to controversies surrounding investments by the Trump family. However, the White House has vetoed some ethical provisions and Democratic nomination requirements, complicating negotiations further. With only a few days remaining in the 2025 Senate schedule, delaying negotiations until January 2026 would face pressures from midterm elections and government funding expirations, potentially causing further legislative delays. The House previously passed the Digital Asset Market Transparency Act and called for the Senate to adopt it directly or amend it, but the Senate is still working on a tailored version. Meanwhile, progressive groups and unions have expressed concerns that inadequate regulation could threaten U.S. financial stability and pose risks to retirees relying on pensions. Senior Democratic lawmakers like Elizabeth Warren continue to pressure, emphasizing potential risks from the rise of the cryptocurrency industry. Overall, the Cryptocurrency Market Structure Bill still faces significant resistance in the Senate, with core regulatory disagreements and a tight legislative schedule making short-term progress unlikely. Market observers are closely watching the legislative developments over the coming weeks and their potential impact on the U.S. crypto market. (CoinDesk)
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The U.S. Senate's Cryptocurrency Market Structure Bill Faces Deadlock Due to Tight Schedule After weeks of bipartisan negotiations, the legislation on the cryptocurrency market structure in the U.S. Senate has made little substantive progress. Democrats have submitted a new counterproposal, accepting parts of the Republican framework but insisting on major reforms in financial stability, market integrity, national security enforcement, and public officials' digital asset conduct. These disagreements indicate that there is no consensus within the Senate on the bill's core regulatory framework. Key contentious issues include digital asset disclosure, secondary market protections, tools for identifying and curbing illegal finance, compliance obligations for decentralized platforms, and limits on stablecoin yields. Democrats are also pushing for strict ethical standards to prevent elected officials from profiting through cryptocurrency projects, a point closely linked to controversies surrounding investments by the Trump family. However, the White House has vetoed some ethical provisions and Democratic nomination requirements, complicating negotiations further. With only a few days remaining in the 2025 Senate schedule, delaying negotiations until January 2026 would face pressures from midterm elections and government funding expirations, potentially causing further legislative delays. The House previously passed the Digital Asset Market Transparency Act and called for the Senate to adopt it directly or amend it, but the Senate is still working on a tailored version. Meanwhile, progressive groups and unions have expressed concerns that inadequate regulation could threaten U.S. financial stability and pose risks to retirees relying on pensions. Senior Democratic lawmakers like Elizabeth Warren continue to pressure, emphasizing potential risks from the rise of the cryptocurrency industry. Overall, the Cryptocurrency Market Structure Bill still faces significant resistance in the Senate, with core regulatory disagreements and a tight legislative schedule making short-term progress unlikely. Market observers are closely watching the legislative developments over the coming weeks and their potential impact on the U.S. crypto market. (CoinDesk)