

US Senate Democrats are getting flak after they helped move
stablecoin legislation ahead for discussion on the Senate
floor.
On May 19, 16 Democratic senators broke from the party line to
pass a motion to invoke cloture, which will now set the bill up for
debate on the Senate floor. Some of the same Democrats had held up
the bill in early May when they withdrew support, citing corruption
concerns over President Donald Trump’s cryptocurrency dealings.
The bill’s opponents hailed lawmakers’ refusal to support it but
were soon taken aback when the senators reversed their position.
The lightly amended legislation contained no provisions regarding
World Liberty Financial, the Trump family’s crypto venture.
Some activists have said that the Democrats supporting the bill
should be ousted in the upcoming Democratic primaries in 2026,
reflecting a growing rift in the Democratic Party over
cryptocurrencies.
The Senate voted 66-32 to move the bill ahead.
Source:
Stand With Crypto
Democratic lawmakers’ approach to crypto shows split in
party
On May 19, moderate Democratic Senator Mark Warner announced he
would support the bill, stating that it was “not perfect, but it’s far
better than the status quo.”
Warner set corruption concerns aside, stating, “Many senators,
myself included, have very real concerns about the Trump family’s
use of crypto technologies to evade oversight [...] But we cannot
allow that corruption to blind us to the broader reality:
blockchain technology is here to stay.”
Warner concluded it would be better for the US to move forward
on imperfect stablecoin legislation than to fall behind other
jurisdictions.
Democratic Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, one of the bill’s
sponsors, also pushed aside Trump corruption concerns, saying they
should be addressed separately.
Related: US Senate moves forward with GENIUS
stablecoin bill
“A lot of what President Trump is engaged in is already
illegal,” she said, adding that she didn’t want the president’s
scandals to “distract us from the important goal of having a clear
regulatory structure in the United States that can onshore this
industry.”
During the vote, progressive Democrats disagreed. Senator
Elizabeth Warren, the top Democrat on the Senate Banking Committee
and a vocal critic of the crypto industry, reportedly got into a heated argument with Gillibrand on the
Senate floor.
Warren argued on the Senate floor ahead of the vote, “A
bill that turbocharges the stablecoin market, while facilitating
the President’s corruption and undermining national security,
financial stability, and consumer protection is worse than no bill
at all.”
Democrats opposing the bill aren’t giving up either. Senator
Michael Bennet of Colorado, who voted against the GENIUS Act,
immediately introduced another bill, jokingly named “the STABLE
GENIUS Act,” combining the names of the bills in the Senate and
House of Representatives.
The bill would prevent the president, vice-president and members
of Congress from “issuing or endorsing digital assets” and require
them to place any assets they hold in a blind trust while in
office.
While the bill has little chance of passing — numerous acts that
would limit members’ of Congress financial activities have fizzled
out — it shows the Democrats are split on how they should provide
opposition.
Democratic activists lambast Democratic GENIUS supporters
The progressive and activist wings of the Democratic party have
roundly criticized Congressional leadership for compromising with
Republicans on measures that, they claim, should be deal
breakers.
In March, activists were enraged when Senator Chuck Schumer, a
Democrat from New York and minority leader in the Senate, voted
with the Republicans on a continuing resolution for government
funding. One progressive observer accused him of giving up leverage and weakening
the Democratic position.
Then, in April, disagreements over how Democrats should fight
Trump’s mass deportations further deepened the rift.
Now, crypto has become another wedge between the activist wing,
which provides crucial voter activation during elections, and
centrists in Congress.
Ezra Levin, co-founder and co-executive director of progressive
activist organization Indivisible, wrote on BlueSky:
Ezra
Levin commenting on crypto bill. Source:
Ezra Levin
Communications strategist Murshed Zaheed, who formally worked
for the offices of Senator Harry Reid and Representative Louise
Slaughter, urged people to call their senators to come out
against the bill.
“Any Democrat who votes for this today — should never be taken
seriously again if they send out emails, text and do videos [...]
talking a big game about Trump’s corruption,” he said.
Related: What to expect at Trump’s memecoin
dinner
Chris Kluwe, a former American football player who has since
become a prominent activist within Democratic politics, said on May 20 he was “excited to get a chance to
speak at the CA state Dem convention on May 31st, I’m sure [the
bill] won’t come up at all in the 4 minutes I’ve been
allotted.”
On BlueSky, labor researcher and media law historian Peter
Labuza posted “Primary List” in reply to a post of the 16
Democratic senators who helped support the bill.
The subject of primary elections, the intra-party elections to
decide who will represent the party in a given district, has also
grown contentious.
On May 12, the Democratic National Convention (DNC) voted to void the results of an internal party vote
nominating David Hogg as a vice chair. The decision essentially
strips Hogg of his title at the DNC and, with it, the ability to
promote his controversial policy of sponsoring progressive
challengers in Democratic primary elections.
Hogg had planned to spend $20 million to support progressive and
young candidates in Democratic Party primaries as part of the
“Leaders We Deserve” campaign — an activist group that aims to
elevate younger leaders with a more combative tone against the
Trump administration.
With the stablecoin bills in the House and Senate poised to move
ahead, the Democrats seem ill-suited to mount an effective
opposition to the bills. Internal struggles and interests within
Congress have disunited lawmakers, while activists want a new crop
of congresspeople to represent them next term.
In the Democratic Party’s internal battle between the
anti-crypto progressive wing and the pro-crypto pragmatists, the
latter is winning out, so far.
Magazine:
Father-son team lists Africa’s XRP Healthcare on
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...
Continue reading Senate stablecoin vote splits
Democrats amid concerns over corruption
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Senate stablecoin vote splits Democrats amid
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