The Senatoric Banking Committee has published a new set of Bipartisan principles aimed at shaping complete cryptocurrency legislation in the United States to conduct by senators Tim Scott (R-SC), Cynthia Lummis (R-WY), Thom Tillis (R-R-NC) and Bill Hagerty (R-TN), the frame consumers.
“Our absolute priority must be a legal certainty without stifling innovation,” said Senator Tillis, adding that principles have found a balance between progress and protection. Senator Lummis has echoed the emergency, declaring that the United States is delayed on world leaders such as the EU and Singapore in the regulation of digital assets.
Key components include the definition of the legal state of digital assets, the clarification of the regulatory jurisdiction between agencies such as the SEC and the CFTC, and the implementation of narrowly targeted anti-flowage measures. The guidelines were announced just before a sub-comity audience featuring leaders in the Coinbase and Multicoin Capital industry, strengthening bipartite momentum to structured cryptography regulations.
The announcement follows the law on the clarity of the digital asset market (HR 3633), which adopted both the financial and agriculture committees of the Chamber and which is now going to a full vote. The bill would move the cryptographic surveillance of the SEC to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), signaling a potential overhaul of federal governance of cryptography.
Meanwhile, the Federal Housing Finance Agency explores how Crypto Holdings can influence mortgage requests, reflecting the growing relevance of cryptography in traditional finance.
In a separate decision, Senator Adam Schiff (D-CA) presented the Parts Act to prevent the presidents and their families from taking advantage of digital assets during their conditions, a few days after voting for the Trump law law, which affirms that the criticisms do the opposite.
The evolution of the political landscape of cryptography reflects both increasing support and meticulous examination in Washington.