Stablecoin bill gets second chance with Northern Mariana lawmakers
12 Maio 2025 - 12:20AM
Cointelegraph


Tinian, a small island in the US territory of the Northern
Mariana Islands, could get a second chance at launching a
stablecoin after the territory’s Senate voted to override the
governor’s earlier veto of its stablecoin bill.
On May 9, the Northern Mariana Islands Senate
voted 7-1 to
override Governor Arnold
Palacios' April 11 veto of the bill, which would allow the
Tinian local government to issue licenses to internet casinos and
includes a provision for the Tinian treasurer to issue, manage and
redeem a “Tinian Stable Token.”
The bill will now head to the 20-member Northern Mariana Islands
House, which will need a two-thirds majority vote to override the
veto and pass the bill into law.
If the House is quick to pass the bill, the Tinian government
could be in the lead for the first US public entity to issue a
stablecoin. It’s in a race against the state of Wyoming, which is
aiming to issue a stablecoin by
July.
Tinian is governed by the local government, the Municipality of
Tinian and Aguiguan, and is one of four municipalities in the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, a small US territory
in the Pacific north of Guam.
Tinian has just over 2,000 residents, and its economy heavily
relies on tourism.
Senators push “much-needed” bill despite “deep
concerns”
Governor Palacios said in his letter last month that he vetoed
the bill as it “presents several legal issues and may be
unconstitutional” and would regulate an activity that could not “be
clearly restricted” to Tinian.
Democrat Senator Celina Babauta, the only one to vote against
overriding the veto, said before the vote that she had “deep
concerns with respect to the lack of resources, the lack of
manpower” to enforce the gambling law and police use of the
stablecoin.
“We are restricted by federal statutes and must comply with
that,” she added.
Senator Celina Babauta (right) delivers remarks at a
Senate hearing alongside Senator Karl King-Nabors (middle).
Source: YouTube
“We struggle with trying to find creative and innovative ways to
diversify our economy and our industries,” Babauta said. “I don't
believe that gambling is the only thing that we can be looking
forward to every single time there's an investor that comes
in.”
However, Republican Senator Karl King-Nabors, who represents
Tinian and co-authored the bill, said it was “a far more stringent
and efficient way to oversee the online gaming aspect.”
“This stablecoin is tracked through software, and if anything,
it allows for more transparency when it comes to the Tinian Casino
Gaming Control Commission,” he added.
King-Nabors said the bill aligned with “much-needed” economic
diversification measures, as the local economy was yet to bounce
back from a COVID-19 pandemic-induced slump.
“This legislation stands at a time where we're going through so
much economic hardships,” King-Nabors added. “I find it difficult
that we're constantly having to step over obstacles when we're
trying to incentivize and look for ways to bring in revenue that
don't affect our environment, that don't require a brick and
mortar, that don't impact our land.”
Tinian bids for fully-backed stablecoin
Republican Senator for Tinian, Jude Hofschneider, led the
introduction of the bill in February, which aims to amend a local
Tinian law to allow internet-only casino licenses, along with
allowing the island to launch a fully backed US dollar-pegged
stablecoin.
A four-member Tinian delegation to the Marianas legislature,
which includes Hofschneider and King-Nabors, had passed the bill to
Governor Palacios in a unanimous vote on March 12.
Statements shared with Cointelegraph in March said the
stablecoin is called the Marianas US Dollar (MUSD) and will be
backed by cash and US Treasury bills held in reserve by the Tinian
Municipal Treasury.
The Tinian government chose tech services firm Marianas Rai
Corporation, based in the Northern Mariana Islands’ capital of
Saipan, as the exclusive infrastructure provider to issue and
redeem MUSD.
MUSD is built 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.
Related: Senator Tim Scott slams partisan politics for
failed stablecoin
bill
Marianas Rai Corp. co-founder and technology chief Vin Armani
told Cointelegraph in April that it was “in active discussions with
potential partners” about launching the token after Governor
Palacios’ veto and was “poised to act quickly” as US Congress is
looking to pass stablecoin laws.
In the US, one stablecoin bill, the Guiding and Establishing
National Innovation for US Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act,
has since stalled in Congress after Senate Democrats
pulled support
for the bill due to concerns
about President Donald Trump’s sprawling crypto ventures.
Another stablecoin-regulating bill in the House, the Stablecoin
Transparency and Accountability for a Better Ledger Economy
(STABLE) Act, has also lost
Democrat support due to Trump’s crypto tie-ups.
Legal Panel: Crypto wanted to overthrow banks, now it’s
becoming them in stablecoin fight
...
Continue reading Stablecoin bill gets second chance
with Northern Mariana lawmakers
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Stablecoin bill gets second chance with Northern
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