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Cryptocurrency News Articles
Stablecoin Regulation Bill Poised to Move Forward in the Senate With Newly Polished Language
May 15, 2025 at 11:48 pm
After a suddenly rocky road for the U.S. legislative effort to regulate stablecoin issuers, the Senate is poised to move forward again with newly polished language in the bill
After a sudden, rocky road for the U.S. legislative effort to regulate stablecoin issuers, the Senate is poised to move forward again with newly polished language in the bill that may see some procedural movement as soon as Thursday.
The Senate's stablecoin push veered off course a week ago when Democrats objected, concentrating on President Donald Trump's personal crypto business interests, but the lawmakers continued negotiations and are said to be close to an agreement on updated text to the "Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins" (GENIUS) Act, according to people familiar with the talks.
The bill would set up a federal regulatory framework for cryptocurrencies pegged to the value of another asset, such as Tether's USDT$ and Circle's USDC$, and there's a similar one grinding its way through the House of Representatives. A previous version of the bill advanced out of the Senate Banking Committee with bipartisan support earlier this year, giving the crypto sector hope that it would probably meet with little resistance on the Senate floor.
But the text was later updated and the Senate failed to muster enough votes to begin the final stage of the bill's passage, a process known as cloture in which 60 senators need to agree to move legislation to an open floor debate.
Every Democrat and two Republicans voted against it (a third Republican, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, originally supported the cloture motion but flipped his vote at the last minute in a procedural move to keep the legislation alive). That left the stablecoin bill in legislative limbo, but people familiar with the matter said it may soon be back on track. The next vote would likely be a procedural action to buy lawmakers more time to negotiate specifics of the bill than a cloture motion, two of the people said.
One of the central points of contention for Democrats were President Trump's increasing forays into crypto, particularly after Abu Dhabi-based investment firm MGX announced it would close its purchase of a stake in global exchange Binance using USD1, a stablecoin issued by World Liberty Financial, which in turn is linked to Trump and his children.
However, the bill's text, which hasn't yet been released publicly, is unlikely to include any provisions addressing this potential conflict of interest. Senator Gillibrand, the New York Democrat who has been working on crypto legislation for years, suggested at a Stand With Crypto event on Wednesday that the latest version still doesn't focus directly on Trump.
"This bill does have some ethics requirements that I think are really strong and very good, but it's not an ethics bill per se, and if we were dealing with all President Trump's ethics problems, it would be a very long and detailed bill," she said.
Gillibrand said she's "very optimistic we will have a vote soon enough."
At the same event, Senator Cynthia Lummis, the Republican chair of a digital assets subcommittee in the Senate and a frequent partner to Gillibrand on crypto regulation, argued against lawmakers being distracted by the "shiny object that's out in the corner."
"I don't want the fact that President Trump's name comes up in relation to this to distract us from the important goal of having a clear regulatory structure in the United States that can onshore this industry that is being used to provide a new market for US Treasuries that helps the dollar stay the world reserve currency," Lummis said.
Bo Hines, Trump's executive director for the President's Council of Advisers on Digital Assets, said at CoinDesk's Consensus 2025 conference in Toronto on Wednesday that "negotiations are ongoing" when asked about a possible vote on Thursday. He indicated that he thinks the legislation will keep moving.
"We shall see," he said.
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