Senate Republicans Release Draft Bill For Crypto Market Structure
Republican leaders of the Banque Committee of the US Senate have published their version of the legislation for a structure of the digital asset market, suggesting that they could combine their efforts with a bill adopted in the House of Representatives.
In a Tuesday opinion, four Republican senators, including the president of the banking committee, Tim Scott and the president of the digital asset subcommittee, Cynthia Lummis, published a project to discuss the legislation on the structure of the cryptographic market.
According to the legislators, the law provisionally entitled Financial Innovation Act “is based on” the law on the clarity of the digital asset market (Clarity), which was adopted in the Chamber on July 17.
“My colleagues in the House and Senate and I share the same objective: provide clear road rules to digital assets,” said Scott.
Although the Republicans of the Chamber had three bills of Crypto law with Bipartisan support last week, only the National Innovation Act established for the Stables -Coins (Engineering) of the Organization and the creation of the American law (engineering) had been transmitted by the two chambers and was able to be signed by the American president Donald Trump.
Scott and Lummis said in June that they had planned to have the market structure bill adopted by the Senate before October.
In relation: Many senators absent from the structure audience of the “bipartite” cryptography market
Look side by side on the bills of the Senate and the Chamber
The two versions of chambers of the legislation on the structure of the cryptographic market proposed requirements for disclosure of modification under the ACT Securities of 1933, which implies that existing laws did not agree to regulate modern investment vehicles such as digital assets.
The Clarity Act seemed to allow greater collaboration between the American Securities and Exchange (SEC) commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) in the establishment of rules for digital asset transactions.
The Senate bill also included modifications related to the disclosure of “auxiliary assets”, which, according to the legislators, applied to digital assets which were not considered to be titles.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwzodbdbiuw
“With bipartite support, the Clarity Act heading towards the Senate signals increasing the momentum behind a complete crypto policy and the growing alignment with the need for market structure rules, even if the full passage can take more time while the Congress breaks for the summer,” said Liat Sheter, Elliptical Vice President of Global Policy and Regulation, Cointelegraph.
It is not known whether the bill will have enough support to go to the Senate, where the Republicans have a thin majority on the Democrats.
More than 70 Democrats in the Chamber have rolled up with the Republicans to adopt the law on clarity, but any change in the wording of the bill could trigger debates or declines in a stormy congress.
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