Northern Marianas vetoes bill for Tinian to launch its own USD stablecoin
15 Abril 2025 - 2:57AM
Cointelegraph


The governor of the Northern Mariana Islands, a small Pacific US
territory just north of Guam, has killed the legislation that would
have allowed one of the territory’s local governments to launch a
fully backed US dollar-pegged stablecoin.
In an April 11 letter seen by Cointelegraph, Northern Mariana
Islands Governor Arnold Palacios said he vetoed the bill as it
“presents several legal issues and may be unconstitutional.”
Palacios’ letter said the bill, which
largely dealt with issuing licenses to internet casinos, would
regulate an activity that could not “be clearly restricted” to
Tinian, a small island forming part of the territory that was
hoping to launch a stablecoin.
Tinian, which has just over 2,000 residents and a largely
tourism-based economy, is governed by the local government, the
Municipality of Tinian and Aguiguan, one of four municipalities in
the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.
In February, Republican Northern Marianas Senator Jude
Hofschneider led the introduction of the bill to amend a local
Tinian law to allow internet-only casino licenses, which tacked on
a provision allowing the Tinian treasurer to issue, manage and
redeem a “Tinian Stable Token.”
The four-member Tinian delegation to the Marianas legislature
passed the
bill in a unanimous vote on March
12.
In vetoing the bill, Palacios didn’t comment on the proposed
stablecoin, instead taking issue with its aim to police an industry
that can cross jurisdictional boundaries, and said the measure
lacked “robust enforcement measures to prevent illegal gaming
activities.”
A highlighted excerpt of Governer Palacios’ letter noting
his reasons for vetoing the stablecoin and internet gambling bill
Source: Northern Mariana Islands Governor’s Office
Tinian misses chance at beating Wyoming
The bill’s passage could have seen Tinian’s government be the
first US government entity to issue a stablecoin ahead of Wyoming,
whose Governor Mark Gordon said in March that the state’s
stablecoin could be ready for a launch in
July.
The stablecoin was to be known as the Marianas US Dollar (MUSD),
which was to be fully backed by cash and US Treasury bills held in
reserve by the Tinian Municipal Treasury, according to statements
shared with Cointelegraph last month.
Related:
The GENIUS stablecoin bill is a CBDC trojan horse —
DeFi exec
The Tinian local government chose tech services firm Marianas
Rai Corporation, based in the Commonwealth’s capital of Saipan, to
exclusively provide the infrastructure to issue and redeem MUSD and
develop its ecosystem.
The token was slated to launch on the eCash blockchain, a
network that
rebranded from Bitcoin Cash ABC in 2021 and is a
fork of
Bitcoin Cash — a blockchain that split off
from Bitcoin in 2017.
The launch of MUSD was meant to coincide with Google’s $1
billion plan announced in
April to route fiber-optic subsea cables from the mainland US
through Tinian and onto Japan to improve internet connectivity.
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Tinian to launch its own USD stablecoin
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Northern Marianas vetoes bill for Tinian to launch
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