US Congress May See Stablecoin Bill This Year, Say Lawmakers
According to CoinDesk, US Rep. Patrick McHenry and Sen. Cynthia Lummis have stated that there is a potential path for a stablecoin bill in Congress this year, although they could not provide a specific timeline. The US Senate has been lagging on the stablecoin issue, with no committee work on a bill yet. McHenry, the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, said that a stablecoin bill is largely worked out in the House of Representatives and just needs a scheduled floor vote. He has been working with Rep. Maxine Waters, the panel's top Democrat, on a stablecoin bill for nearly two years. Sen. Cynthia Lummis also spoke at the event, saying those working on the stablecoin bill in the Senate are speaking 'daily' with their House counterparts. She predicted that a compromise bill is the most likely crypto legislation to make it in 2024. Lummis noted that Sen. Chuck Schumer, the majority leader of the Senate, has said he is willing to consider such a bill. McHenry's committee has previously passed a stablecoin bill in his committee with a bipartisan vote that saw several Democrats supporting the Republican-driven version despite Waters' opposition.