Crypto Thought They Bought Congress. They Bought a Headache.
The industry thought it had its legislative wish list on track for passage. Then it all got mired in a fight over credit card swipe fees.
by David Dayen June 9, 2025
When we last left the bill known as the GENIUS Act, the fix appeared to be in. The crypto industry had spent millions in the 2024 elections to get a friendly regulatory regime, and GENIUS, which would sanction stablecoins and enable Big Tech firms to issue their own private currencies, was the opening salvo in a broad restructuring of the financial system to suit their ends. There was a minor hiccup in the form of Donald Trumps orgy of crypto corruption, including a new Trump-issued stablecoin, which made it difficult for Democrats to effectively bless cryptos codification. But they found a work-around, by pretending to fight Trumps corruption with an amendment blocking presidents from issuing crypto assets that was designed to fail, after which they would happily sign on to the bill.
Thats where we were headed. A motion to advance the GENIUS Act passed, with 16 Democrats joining nearly all Republicans. And final passage, after the amendments were disposed with, was scheduled to happen last week.
It did not. And the reasons for that are fascinating, due more to banking industry upset, and an idiosyncratic crusade by a right-wing Republican that the rest of his caucus doesnt want to touch, rather than to some change of heart among Democrats. However, the pain imposed on the Democrats crypto collaboration has made it harder for the full deregulatory agenda to pass, and just maybe saved the nation from needless financial pain.
First, some banking interests are working to stop the GENIUS Act. While the Independent Community Bankers of America has been largely mute, state-based organizations in Illinois and Texas have stepped up, citing numerous risks. They oppose Congress establishing a shadow sector of stablecoin-issuing non-banks, with access to Federal Reserve payment and lending services and the possible ability to pay interest on stablecoin deposits, without the same regulatory scrutiny that banks endure. The Prospect has learned that both these community banking associations have been working on Capitol Hill to stop the bill, perceiving threats to their entire business model.
https://prospect.org/power/2025-06-09-crypto-thought-they-bought-congress-swipe-fees/
Joseph Stiglitz: Bitcoin ought to be outlawed
The World Economic Forum
https://www.weforum.org stories 2017/11 joseph-...
Nov 30, 2017 Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz has said the cryptocurrency 'doesn't serve any useful function'.