Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) is stepping into the spotlight with a new set of principles for regulating the crypto industry. As the top Democrat on the Senate Banking Committee and a well-known critic of digital assets, she’s pushing for stronger rules to protect the financial system from what she sees as growing risks in the crypto space.
Her announcement comes as a direct response to Republican lawmakers, setting the stage for a serious political showdown over crypto regulation in Washington.
Warren’s plan challenges the approach laid out by Senate Banking Chair Tim Scott (R-S.C.) and Senators Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.), Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), and Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.). Their framework, introduced in late June, promotes innovation and lighter regulation.
Warren strongly disagrees.
“I’m concerned that what my Republican colleagues are aiming for is another industry handout that gives the crypto lobby everything on its wish list,” she is expected to say during a Senate hearing on Wednesday.
She warns that weakening financial regulations to favor crypto could undermine securities laws and create risks for the traditional financial system. According to Warren, crypto should not get special treatment, instead it should play by the same rules as the rest of the financial world.
Warren’s framework centers on four key goals:
She will also address concerns over “President’s crypto corruption“, highlighting President Donald Trump’s and his family’s ventures in stablecoins, meme coins, and bitcoin mining.
“If we’re going to provide rules of the road for crypto, we need to shut down this superhighway for presidential corruption at the same time,” Warren will argue.
Her approach is about tightening rules, not creating new ways for crypto insiders or politicians to benefit.
Meanwhile, Republican lawmakers are focused on encouraging innovation. Their framework calls for updated regulations that are “targeted” and “pro-innovation,” and suggests that financial agencies should be open to the growth of crypto.
Warren, however, believes this approach puts the industry ahead of investor protections and opens the door to future financial problems.
The Senate is preparing to introduce a broader crypto market structure bill. This comes after passing the GENIUS Act, which focuses on stablecoin regulation. That bill now heads to the House for review.
The upcoming market structure bill will deal with how oversight of the crypto industry is divided between the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).
Senators Scott and Lummis say they now aim to pass the full bill by the end of September, slightly later than their original August timeline.
Warren’s proposed framework brings a tougher stance to the crypto conversation, standing in sharp contrast to the Republican vision. Let’s see how this plays out.
Warren’s plan opposes Republican frameworks that promote lighter regulation and innovation, fearing they are “industry handouts” that could weaken existing financial safeguards.
Warren highlights President Trump’s ventures in stablecoins, meme coins, and Bitcoin mining, arguing that new crypto rules must “shut down this superhighway for presidential corruption.”
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