Crypto Industry Gets Chance to Make Its Case to U.S. Congress
In a hearing with the loaded title "A Golden Age of Digital Assets," the sector was — for the first time — mostly treated as a welcome arrival to U.S. finance.

What to know:
- Crypto representatives told lawmakers it's time to move on legislation to establish U.S. regulatory clarity for the industry during a congressional hearing.
- Democrats seized the chance to take shots at President Donald Trump's personal forays into crypto.
The crypto industry got a chance to make a full-throated appeal for Congress to finally intervene and set legal standards for digital assets businesses in the U.S. during a hearing Tuesday in front of the House of Representatives subcommittee that focuses on digital assets.
Under the Republican-led subcommittee's title "A Golden Age of Digital Assets," the industry representatives showed up in the hearing with momentum at all levels of the federal government, including from the White House, whose crypto czar was the one to first utter the "golden age" phrase. Just over two years after the devastation of collapsing crypto lenders and the criminal implosion of FTX in 2022, the industry has proven its sharp recovery with a slate of lawmakers clearly on-board for the legislation the industry has been calling for.
"Under the Trump administration, we will course correct by creating a workable pathway for responsible digital asset companies to set up operations here in the United States," said Representative Bryan Steil, a Wisconsin Republican who chairs the subcommittee that's an offshoot of the House Financial Services Committee.
Republicans on the panel decried the "unpredictable and hostile approach" to crypto of former President Joe Biden's administration (as Steil put it), with an executive branch that's already reversing some of those past policies at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the Securities and Exchange Commission. But the holy grail for the industry is a wide-reaching bill like the one passed in the House in the previous session of Congress.
"There are many issues to debate over the next several years, but we need to move now and put that basic foundation in place," said Jonathan Jachym, a lawyer and global head of policy at U.S. exchange Kraken.
Among the hearing's witnesses was Timothy Massad, a former chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission when it first flagged bitcoin
This was the first hearing of the digital assets panel during this new Congress, but other committees in both chambers have already been digging into crypto-heavy issues, such as debanking. Earlier on Tuesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell agreed that debanking is a problem worth exploring, and he also agreed that the Fed wouldn't be chasing a central bank digital currency on his watch.
While Republicans and the industry witnesses bashed the Biden administration's track record, Dems took the opportunity to criticize President Donald Trump for embracing crypto for his personal gain by backing memecoin $TRUMP, which they characterized as a "crypto scam" that presents a dangerous conflict and may violate the constitutional provision against federal officials seeking profit from their office.
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Crypto PAC Fairshake leaps into first midterm Senate race with $5 million in Alabama

The industry's leading campaign-finance operation is getting behind a pro-crypto candidate, Barry Moore, in Alabama's Republican Senate primary.
What to know:
- The crypto industry's campaign-finance arm is flexing with an opening $5 million for a Republican Senate primary election in Alabama as the congressional midterms — still nine months away — begin in earnest.
- Fairshake and its affiliate political action committees say they've got $193 million to spend, so far, which dwarfs most industry PACs and even some of the largest funds directly serving the political parties.
- Alabama congressman Barry Moore will receive supportive advertising with this money, and a Fairshake representative said the group has also dedicated funds to back Representative French Hill, the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee.











