Bankless - Rep Patrick McHenry on Crypto's Big Week in DC
Episode Date: May 21, 2024✨ Mint the episode on Zora ✨ https://zora.co/collect/zora:0x0c294913a7596b427add7dcbd6d7bbfc7338d53f/2 This is a huge week for crypto in DC and we have on Congressman Patrick McHenry to tell ...us all about it. Three big things: 1) SAB 121 repeal bill going to Biden’s desk - will he let it pass or veto? 2) SEC approve/deny Ethereum ETF - decision due thursday. 3) House vote on FIT bill you’ve been championing - well talk about that bill. Stand with Crypto: https://www.standwithcrypto.org/politicians ------ 📣SPOTIFY PREMIUM RSS FEED | USE CODE: SPOTIFY24 https://bankless.cc/spotify-premium ------ BANKLESS SPONSOR TOOLS: 🐙KRAKEN | MOST-TRUSTED CRYPTO EXCHANGE https://k.xyz/bankless-pod-q2 🔗CELO | CEL2 COMING SOON https://bankless.cc/Celo 🛞MANTLE | MODULAR LAYER 2 NETWORK https://bankless.cc/Mantle 🗣️TOKU | CRYPTO EMPLOYMENT SOLUTION https://bankless.cc/toku ⚖️ARBITRUM | SCALING ETHEREUM https://bankless.cc/Arbitrum 🌐 CARTESI | APPLY FOR A GRANT https://bankless.cc/CartesiGovernance ------ TIMESTAMPS 00:00 Start 04:05 Introduction to Congressman McHenry 05:11 Crypto in DC Temp Check 07:34 Generational vs Partisan Divide 12:57 Has Biden's Crypto Sentinent Changed? 16:46 FIT 21 Act 20:10 Security vs Commodity 23:18 Startups Becoming Commodities 26:34 Why Should Congress Support? 29:22 Why Patrick Cares About Crypto 33:25 Stablecoin Legislation 35:37 Will Crypto Still Be Under Attack? 38:24 Trump vs Biden Crypto Policies 40:41 How To Get Involved ------ RESOURCES: Patrick on X: https://x.com/PatrickMcHenry ------ Not financial or tax advice. See our investment disclosures here: https://www.bankless.com/disclosures
Transcript
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Bankless Nation, this is probably the biggest week for crypto in D.C., the capital of the United States, probably ever.
Last week was a massive victory for pro-crypto legislation.
You probably heard David and I talking about this on the roll-up.
Basically, it was good news.
An obscure accounting rule put in place by Gary Gensler's SEC was making it so U.S. companies couldn't even custody crypto.
That rule was actually repealed.
It's called the SAB-121 repeal.
And as we record this episode, that repeal, that bill is on buying.
Biden's desk. He has the option to choose whether to let it pass or to veto it. Vitoing it will mean
anti-crypto. Letting it pass might mean he is pro-crypto. And this week is even more consequential
because the SEC is slated to either approve or deny the Ethereum ETF that happens on Thursday,
I believe. And on Wednesday, the U.S. House of Representatives votes on probably the largest
pro-crypto legislation that we've seen. It's called the Fit21 Act. And our guest is
Representative Patrick McKenry. He is one of the key champions behind this legislation.
So we brought him on to tell us what it is and why he supports it.
And just as a reminder, a vote yes on this bill in D.C. is pro-cropto.
A vote no on this bill signals anti-crypto.
The stakes are pretty high for politicians these days because I think the whole D.C.'s fear is finally waking up to the fact that crypto voters are actually a powerful block in a very close election.
So we have potentially the potentially the power to swing elections.
And we're potentially even splitting the Democratic Party right now along generational lines.
That's one of the big takeaways from the same.
Sab 121 bill. Since 2024 is shaping up to be the first big crypto election with both presidential
candidates, Trump versus Biden, both have public statements aligning themselves either for or against
crypto, something that I think we're going to see even more of as we approach the November
election date. So let's go ahead and get right into this conversation with Congressman Patrick
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Bankless Nation, we are very excited to introduce our next guest.
Congressman Patrick McHenry, he is the chair of the House Financial Services Committee.
He's a key supporter of fit for the 21st Century Act.
This is a bill.
It's major crypto legislation that's going to Congress for vote this week.
Representative McHenry, welcome to Bankless.
Awesome.
Be with you.
fun to listen, but even better to be on with you.
Oh, it's amazing.
I'm excited that you're a listener.
I don't know how many listeners we have in D.C., but there's more than a handful.
I guess the topic of D.C. is first and foremost in the crypto listeners mind this week
because it feels like it's going to be a big week for crypto in D.C.
And I just want to remind people a few things as we get into this conversation.
There's three big things that are happening this week.
First of all, we got the SAB-121 repeal, which you've heard David and I talk about.
That bill is going to Biden's death.
So past Congress.
The big question is, is he going to let this pass or is he going to veto?
We also have the SEC approving or denying the theorem ETF.
That's a decision that's going to happen on Thursday, hopefully.
And also, we have this House vote on the fit bill that Patrick McKenry here has been championing.
And we'll talk about that.
I want to begin this conversation with, I guess, a broader conversation, which is, how about crypto in D.C.?
Like, what's the temperature on crypto in D.C.?
Lately, we've had even the crypto, sorry, the political media.
institutions like Politico saying maybe this is an election issue. There's been polls released by
crypto industry groups that show up to 20% of voters in key swing states identify crypto as a major
issue. So the broadest of questions here to kick us off, is crypto now a 2024 election issue?
Yes. The thing that has shifted here is that an industry that they said was dead is not dead.
Once they said it was dead, it was undead, and they said it was dead again.
So it's the whole wave of all this stuff.
And, you know, the last time, you know, D.C. assumed everything was dead was after FtX blew up.
And you have a lot of my colleagues that got implicated in Sam Bankman's Freed, Sam Bankman-Fried's shenanigans.
I don't know the right way to say it.
I'll see a word.
We like that word.
That's acceptable.
Yeah.
Shenanagance.
That's better than using profanity.
But it keeps going and you have new innovations that are built on this new technology.
And then people experience that because the populace asks elected officials about it.
I think what we see mainly is a generational divide, less of a partisan divide in the House representatives.
those that have been more recently elected have been asked this question in their election process,
so they had to have an answer.
And they had to do a little work in research if they didn't otherwise know.
And those election questions make us better policymakers.
The questions we get from constituents and from voters make us sharpen up our response to them,
either in the affirmative or the negative, and really make us work through our arguments.
So I think the fact that we actually have crypto voters, that is a powerful enabler of sound public policy and forces Washington to actually move.
I really want to get into this generational divide versus partisan divide because that was really revealed to us, the broader crypto community with this SAB-121 repeal.
It was expected to be repealed, but I don't know if it was.
expected to be the vote to be that split.
6830 is a pretty strong divide with a number of key Democrats actually voting for its
repeal, more or less like defecting from like the stated Biden, I will intend to veto this.
And it really seems to have kind of split the Democratic Party between maybe the establishment
Democrats, the Biden administration, the Liz Warren types, and the younger Democrats.
So what was previously the perception of the crypto industry was like it was Republicans versus
Democrats on crypto and it now seems to be a different divide. Maybe you can kind of share some of
your reactions to the 6038 vote and how you think this has kind of changed the game when it
comes to the DC stance towards crypto. Well, a couple of things. So for for folks that aren't
familiar with the Congressional Review Act, right, which is like most people, the Congressional
Review Act is a law that enables Congress to come in.
pass a bill through the House of the Senate and get it signed by the President, repealing a major
regulatory action. So this happened at the beginning of the Biden administration. And the beginning of the
Biden administration, a Democrat House and Senate and a Democrat president repealed Trump
major regulations. At the beginning of the Trump administration, they repealed major,
we repealed major pieces of Obama's regulatory policy put in place last year in office. This has been
rarely done. We use the Congressional Review Act to stop the Securities Exchange Commission's accounting
rule, which is a very precise thing. Accounting rules usually don't get congressional debate.
They don't actually get debate in society because they're really common sense, largely driven by
common sense on how you treat assets, how you protect assets in this discussion, or how you
account for assets and liabilities in the broader sense on accounting policy. For us to
move legislation out of my committee repealing a staff accounting bulletin out of the Secures
Exchange Commission seems very particular, doesn't seem like as a big policy, but when you
explain it and the impact it has to basically says your crypto is not protected like any other
asset, commodity or securities actually are protected. You have, even your car is, your car title is better
protected than what the Secures Exchange Commission put in place with a staff accounting bulletin.
So, number one, for us to repeal an accounting bulletin means it has to be so egregious
and so dumb. Number one. Number two, to get Democrats to vote to repeal a major regulation from a
Democrat or Republican versus on Republican, right, is a major thing, especially in our current
politics.
We had 21 Democrats and then we had, you know, over 10 in the Senate do the same.
Those are big things, huge things for Democrats to do, especially an election year for the Democrat
president running for reallenging.
Okay.
So those two things are noteworthy on this.
that shows that there is more power, more interests, there's more power behind crypto voters.
There's more interest among policymakers to speak to those voters' needs, or to deal with what they think is actually an innovation or some greater societal good, right?
So it's either crass politics, which, frankly, I've been elected to 10 terms of the House.
So I'm as much of a politician as anyone, maybe more so.
But it's either speaking of voters' needs or seeing something and saying, no, I'm actually going to explain it to voters on why this is important.
Either way, the vote total was huge, especially for something as significant as going against the president of your own party in a major regulation.
And why? Why is this so huge? How do you explain this? Just like, was it just so?
arbitrary and dumb, as you say, that just like all legislators, like many legislators kind of
caught wind of this and said it doesn't make sense? Or just how do you explain this outcome?
No, it's because there's been a massive amount of work done to educate members of Congress
and there's been an interest among members of Congress on being educated. And so this is a different
vote than what we've got, would have gotten on crypto 10 years ago. Different vote, much wider,
much more understood by policymakers, that there is something good, something innovative, and you need to be for it.
The specifics, okay, like, we're not going to get into, we don't need to get into specifics on
every policy area, but it's a broad inclination of, are you pro-crypto or anti-crypto, and what's
the balance here? What's good?
So Biden has said that he intends to veto this bill, and he says,
that before we got this 6830 vote out of the Senate. I think he has seven days to actually
sign that veto. Do you think that any of his calculus has changed as a result of this vote?
Or do you think that he's actually going to be in somewhat of a bind with so many Democrats
signaling not being aligned with his veto? Well, let's see what he says about the Fit 21 bill
because the staff accounting bill Bolton just is how institutions hold criminal.
Do they hold it like you to hold a stock or a bond in custody for someone?
Or do you have to hold it on your balance sheet and hold capital against it as if it's a, as if it's a liability?
So this is a technical thing.
The president being for his own regulatory, the regulatory policy that came from his appointee makes sense.
Let's just be honest, right?
I mean, Joe Biden appointed Gary Gensler.
chair of the Securities Exchange Commission and the Senate confirmed him. So you had Democrat senators
that voted in favor of him to become the chair of the Securities Exchange Commission, but you also
had the president nominate him. So they can answer for that. The question now is on this
larger bill on the financial innovation and technology for the 21st Century Act, or FIT 21, as we're
calling it. This bipartisan bill we've marked up out of committee, both the House agriculture
Committee that deals with commodities and the House Financial Services Committee that deals with
securities. We had bipartisan votes out of those committees, my committee of financial services that I chair,
and the House Ag Committee in July of last year. We lost a little momentum because the fall of last
year is kind of nuts in the House of Representatives. And that's a separate story. We can go down
that rabbit hole, but without a speaker of the House and for me to serve as acting
speaker or speaker pro tem, you know, for October, kind of threw off the schedule in a way
that I didn't plan for. I personally didn't plan for any of that. But anyway, legislatively,
my hope was to get this bill voted on in the fall of last year. And we'd had much more
optionality of getting this signing a law or something like this, signing a law, this Congress.
But here we are in May of the election year. I think it's more important what the President
says about fit 21 this week than whether or not he vetoes Sab 121. If he vetoes Sab 121, as we expect,
but says something positive about what we've done here that will help unlock innovation here in the
United States, make sure that we keep pace in regulatory policy with Europe, with Japan,
even with Hong Kong.
You know, this is, that's going to be the bigger statement, I think, from the White House.
And they're either going to be pro-crypto or anti-crypto, and they'll have to answer for it.
Yeah, it's just fascinating.
I got to congratulate you on the impeccable timing of kicking this into May because
it's like it's just a way better timeline to do this.
because you're coming with the Fit 21 Act vote.
That happens this week, I believe, in the House.
And at a time where last week we got a tremendous amount of momentum,
feels like DC has really woken up to the fact that there are crypto-single-issue voters,
and there's a lot of them.
And they could actually swing election outcomes,
and their voice needs to be heard by Congress.
So it's perfect timing, I think, for lawmakers to sort of contemplate fit.
Can you tell us what it is?
So the Fit 21 Act, tell us what it does for crypto.
Maybe first talk to the crypto listeners in our audience who are quite frankly pretty fed up representative with the way crypto legislation and the way the U.S. is reacting to this industry and to the community and to average everyday Americans who hold crypto.
Sell it to us.
What does this do for crypto?
So currently in federal law, we have no definition of what is a, what is a, what is.
what is a digital asset.
So we have people that put out a white paper and pretend to be Satoshi and are fraudsters.
And we have no definition of what that is.
It is buyer beware.
You have people that are pretending to be innovators like FTX, and they're running their
whole business on a spreadsheet, like on an Excel spreadsheet with QuickBooks.
I mean, so that's not the type of innovation we want.
want fraudsters to be able to run roughshod over this place. We want real innovation.
So first, we have a definition under federal law of what is a digital asset for the first time.
Second, we provide clarity between the Secures and Exchange Commission and the Commodities Futures
Trading Commission on who regulates what. We have securities and we have commodities.
those are defined in federal law.
And then according to this act in point one,
we have a definition of a digital asset.
So if you're a digital asset
and you are truly decentralized,
you're a commodity.
And if you're not decentralized,
then you're probably a security.
And that's the clarity we need
because the SEC is fighting with a CFTC.
And when the kids are fighting,
Congress, the parent has to step in
and say,
you get this responsibility, you get that responsibility. And here are the clear dividing lines.
This is what the Europeans have done with Mika on giving a definition. It's what they've done in
UK. It's what they've done in Hong Kong. It's what they've done in Singapore. It's what they've done in
Japan. Provide clarity of what it is and how you exchange it, how you buy it, how you sell it,
what are your property rights for the asset. And that's what we provide in this law. So point one is a
definition. Point two is the definition, it is who controls the means of exchange, the SEC or the
CFTC. And then we get in all the particulars of, of, of, of the property right and, and they change.
So we don't just say to the CFTC and the SEC have added. We, we specify to them that this is a new,
unique, definitive thing that needs to be treated as a unique thing under regulation. And so,
So we prescribe that with both the SEC and the CFTC.
It's clarity.
I mean, that is clarity.
So you don't have the Secure's Exchange Commission under Gary Gensler running roughshod
over innovators that are truly trying to comply with the law, but have found themselves
a foul of the Gensler regime to SEC.
So can we test that?
Let's say Fit 21 was in place, right?
It does seem like there is maybe some, certainly some ambiguity at the SEC with
respect to crypto asset network, Ethereum, as to whether it's a security or not, right? There's some
ambiguity there. The CFTC, it seems like, has been clear that it is a commodity. We really don't
know what the SEC thinks about Ethereum. And if it 21 was in place, would we know by default?
Like, does something like Ethereum clearly pass the test of true decentralization? Or how would that
be, how would that work in a use case? It does. It does. Ethereum would clearly pass
the decentralization test that we have in this act.
And there are a number of assets we put through this test to see where it would fall out.
But Ethereum clearly meets that mark and would be a digital commodity, just like Bitcoin is a digital commodity.
These things are truly decentralized.
You don't have a narrow group dictating how the whole, you don't have a neuro,
narrow group having a disproportionate share of the economics and the voting control over
Ethereum, therefore be decentralized. And we have a decentralization test that we've refined and
refined and refined with a lot of feedback. And a couple of my colleagues, you know, French Hill
from Arkansas is the lead on Fed 21 for House Republicans. He's the chair of the Digital
Asset subcommittee on my committee. His vice chair is Warren Davidson.
of Ohio, you know, Warren, and he's a, you know, very early on in this space. And Tom Emmer,
who's the House Republican Webb still very, very early on just like Warren in the digital
asset space. And we, they have worked and worked to refine what is this decentralization test.
So you don't have the SEC taking powers that they should not have like they're currently doing.
and a clear test, a very clear bright line test that puts people, that allows innovators to clearly see where they will fall if they make certain decisions.
And the fact is, you have, you have, you have, you have assets that are clearly digital commodities today.
and you have assets that are clearly securities and are wrapped in securities fraud today.
Right.
Now, the SEC doesn't police those because they usually can't find the bad actors or don't know how to,
or they're not going to get the big news pop for getting these bad actors.
They'd rather go after the folks that are either in the public markets or raise lots of money
or dominant players in the press.
And so, you know, we provide this clarity.
And I think it's really important, that bright line test.
In the current state of things, there's a catch-22 about teams who are trying to bootstrap a project,
bootstrap a token, bootrap a network.
And the vision of this team is to have a fully decentralized network in the fullness of time.
But in the beginnings of this lifecycle of project startup development, it's very central.
and very like insider control.
That's how all things start in the world of startups.
And so they would like very likely be classified as a security.
But yet this classification also prevents them from decentralizing their network
because they cannot become a commodity.
So there's like this self-terminating process that the ambiguity of the SEC has like
not fixed and actually kind of created.
Is there a clarity, is their path for startups to actually move towards the
decentralized end of the spectrum and become?
my commodity in the Fit 21 bill?
Yes.
That was the very scenario that we went through.
So imagine you take no outside capital.
Well, a whole section of the provisions of this bill won't affect you because you're not
raising money with the securities offering.
And so bootstrapping and that version of it, there is a clear process by which you go
through the funnel.
and you come out a digital asset, a digital commodity with that regulatory scheme for a digital
commodity.
With Emmer, Tom Emmer, spent a lot of time working on that very subject and was really concerned,
and appropriately so, that the SEC would never let you check out, right?
The Hotel California idea, right?
You can check out, but you can never leave.
And so we've we've gone through and tighten up that language to make it clear that, you know, that very circumstance, bootstrap team and how are they treated?
How are they treated in that in that decentralization process?
Because centralization and decentralization, it's a broad spectrum, right?
I don't know that everyone's going to be able to achieve Bitcoin decentralization.
Because how widely it's held, how large that market is, and how resilient, by the way, that market is, that would be kind of the gold standard, if you will.
Nice.
That was lame.
But that's where you want to achieve.
That's where you want to go for decentralization.
that's kind of the dream. And so, which you shoot for. But in the very beginning, you have an
idea, you have code, and you have a handful of insiders, and then how do you get from that
handful of insiders into, you know, the wide, large-scale holdings? We deal with all of that
in the structure of this bill. Okay. Now, why it's so complex and why it takes so long because
you want to make sure you get it right. And you get it right for not the next five,
years, but for the next 30 years.
So there's clearly some wins for the crypto community for crypto natives for
crypto holders here.
Talk about your fellow legislators.
So sell it to them now, right?
So why should Congress support this?
Somebody like, let's say, Democratic minority lead, Hakeem Jeffries, like, where does he
stand on this?
Why should someone like that support this bill?
Number one, consumer protection.
You saw with the FTX failure and a bunch of frauds in this space that you, you
You have bad actors that are going unpoliced.
You have, so you have a massive amount of consumer harm.
Number one.
Number two, you don't have clarity for innovators.
So you have folks that want to create a project here, a technology project here in the United States, and they're choosing to go to the UK.
They're choosing to go to Singapore.
they're choosing to go to mainland Europe to innovate, right?
And you're both laughing because it's absurd, right?
That's not where you go for innovation.
That's where innovation goes to die.
So number one, consumer protection, number two, innovation.
Number three, well, I think number one, number two are the dominant things.
Number three, we have an obligation to clarify what goes to what agency.
And this is what we're doing and stepping in and providing clarity.
So on a very basic level, this is what Congress is supposed to do, is clear things up, make things clear for the populace.
And then number three, number four is a little more political.
Look around.
Do you want to be on the side of innovation?
Do you want to be on the side of innovation or do you want to be on the side of the
of the progressive, the loud progressive folks that are anti-crypto?
But frankly, they're, they've been anti-anti-anty-everything.
And they've been very loud on the progressive left.
And now they're seeing that crypto is, is their political ticket to relevance like the big
bank failures were in the global financial crisis of 2008, 2009. It's not. And these voters are by and
large, crypto voters are by and large, left of center, except they're finding themselves being
solely focused on one issue, which puts them into play. Yeah, I think they are in play. I've talked to a lot of
independence and like generally left-leaning folks that are in crypto who are just like, I can't
believe what some of the establishment Democrats, their policy on this. And if they don't change,
it's going to actually change my vote. I want to ask you a personal question because I know
you've been involved in crypto for quite a long time. You've been working on Fit for a while.
Why are you so personally involved in crypto? Like, why do you care so much about this? Why is it
important to you? So, because I saw how my, well, the origin of this is a pretty basic one,
which is I saw how my dad grew his small business in our backyard. You're like, what does that
have to do with crypto? You know, my dad didn't go to business school. And he told me, he's like,
I didn't go to business school, so I had to go figure out how to be an entrepreneur. He wasn't
going to make his way in corporate life. So, you know, he was going to make his way in corporate life. So,
he decided to try different things and start small businesses and eventually found one that was successful.
So I saw what he was doing outside in small town America.
And I've always looked for ways to unlock financial opportunities for people like my dad,
whether it makes it a little bit easier for you to get a loan so you can start a small business,
whether it's a little bit easier to get investment capital, more cheaply get access investment capital,
whether it's investment crowdfunding, which I championed in the Jobs Act in 2012.
That was a major motivation of seeing what my dad went through.
And so the motivation out of my dad's story took me to crowdfunding.
and from crowdfunding, crypto became the enablement of connecting people with their economic consequences of their action and making it cheaper, faster, better.
So I see that huge economic opportunity unlocked when you actually can more affordably connect with the economy.
And that's what crypto is doing.
Bringing down the cost structure, this has the potential to bring down the cost structure of all the world of finance based off of an architectural change of a network that cannot be done with centralized properties right now.
And bringing that cost structure down helps people that are on the margins or trying to go up, you know, up the economic food chain and go from lower middle class to middle class.
upper middle class. And that that's the mind's eye that I've got on innovation, on
unlocking the world of finance. And that is a long version to tell you a very simple, simple answer,
which is enabling folks in small towns, rural America's rural America to better connect with
our economy. Crypto is the best way to do it, has the best opportunity to,
unlock all this centralized goods that have come out of web two to get to web three, where we're all
going to get, where we all have the opportunity to have the economic upside of this economic
activity. Well said. So, so Fit is going in front of the house. I believe on Wednesday,
there'll be some debate. And, you know, I guess I would say to bankless listeners, this is the
clearest mark I've ever seen on, it's like an acid test for whether you're representative or, like,
politicians, whether Congress is pro-crypto or anti-crypto, similar to the sab test, but even
the sab bill, but even more so. So watch what the politicians do with this one. I think it'll be
particularly noteworthy. Representative McHenry, there's some other legislation that we need,
some more clarity that crypto needs. I want to ask you briefly about stable coin legislation.
Is something around that coming? Like, what can we hope for there? Because that is just as ambiguous
as, you know, securities versus commodities in this space. It is. And look,
Maxim Waters, who's the ranking member of the House Financial Services Committee,
she and I have been negotiating for 23 months on legislation to provide for a federal regulation
of a stable coin.
Right now, New York and Wyoming are the only two states really in action now.
Nebraska has a regime.
Few other states are trying to put together things like California.
but New York is really the actor here for stable coins.
We need to have a federal stable coin payment stable coin regime.
The finer points of this really matter because that that and that on ramp can can either open up the aperture or close it off with federal regulators putting a
a thumb on the scales. So we've got to make sure that the federal regime is tightly constructed,
is narrowly constructed, so you don't have the Federal Reserve looking at this as the world
of crypto as competition. You don't have the Treasury Department think that everything is illicit
finance and therefore can cut it off. And so we want to make sure there are proper protections
for a stable coin regime. That has been my concern with.
with the negotiations that we've had so far, and I want to make sure that language is
appropriately tight so that we actually protect innovation and have a viable, strong on-ramp
that is accessible to folks, but we don't want to go too far where federal regulators can
get out of hand. So I'm interesting getting this done, but it is just taking a lot of time
to make sure we craft the right legislation.
One other thing before we move to close, this is still
maybe tactical. It feels very much like the crypto industry and like startups and,
like even consumer products are under assault. So the SEC now has lawsuits against five
major U.S. crypto companies that are completely legitimate. This is not, we're not talking
about FDX, which like nothing happened with that. We're talking about Coinbase. We're talking
about Krakken. We're talking about uniswap. We're talking about consensus. We're talking about just
the last two weeks, Robin Hood as well. Is there anything we can do with respect to to that?
It feels like our homegrown U.S. companies are under assault by our very regulators that we're
supposed to foster innovation. Does the Fit 21, does that solve this? Or how do we bring a solution
to play for this? Well, it's directionally, it's the opposite direction that the Securities
Exchange Commission is going. We're providing clarity. They're providing ambiguity. They're going
after companies that went public in the last three, four, five years under the Secures
Exchange Commission's requirements. And now the SEC is going after their business practices
that they accepted in their in their offerings to the public. So, you know, we've got to have a check
on the Secures Exchange Commission. And we have to have clarity. Fit 21 is the way to do that.
The ballot box is the way to do that.
Crypto voters making their voices heard to members of the House and the Senate
and saying that their votes, their votes at the ballot box are going to be impacted by how these members of Congress treat digital assets and crypto broadly.
I think that is the powerful voice.
Our system gets it right.
our governmental system gets it right over time.
In the short run, we do many things wrong as Americans.
But over the long term, we get it right.
The reason why we get it right is elections have consequences.
Society moves forward.
And the people's needs are voters, sorry,
the elected officials are responsive to the people's needs over time because of elections.
those things are powerful. We've got to make sure that we speak clearly with our voice and we tell
the elected officials what we want, what we expect, and then we hold them accountable if they, if they don't,
if they don't follow what we request or if they do.
Speaking of the election, this 2024 election, I think, is going to be the most relevant to
crypto that there's ever been both presidential candidates have indicated their alignment towards
the crypto industry or not Biden with his statement to veto sab 121. Donald Trump, as a reaction
to that statement to veto, has more or less said that I am the pro-crypto president because
look at what Biden is doing. There's a conversation in the crypto industry of people expressing
skepticism of Donald Trump's commitment to crypto simply because it's free real estate for him.
like crypto single issue voters are seeing what Biden is is putting out there and looking at Donald
Trump and saying, well, he's being friendly to us. But other people are skeptical that Donald Trump
is actually planning on any following through on any sort of commitment to the crypto industry.
I'm wondering if you have any just like thoughts or reflections as to like what the actual
like stakes are for both Biden and Donald Trump as it comes to the 2024 election.
And whether you have any sort of indication of the credible statements from Donald Trump.
Trump here. Well, let's see what they say about this bill. Let's let's see what they say about
FIT 21, number one. Number two, you have to have a policy behind words. President Biden issued an
executive order that was broadly, I would say, a little inclined towards crypto. That's how I took it
when he did it. And now that I've produced legislation out of my committee, responsive to that
executive order, he's nowhere to be found. So let's see how he responds. And I want them both to be
forfeit 21, right? And then I want this left up to crypto voters on who you believe and who's going to
carry out the policy set that the voters want. But I'm interested in what they're going to do.
You can hold people accountable in the election process. They've got to put more oomph behind their
words. They've got to put policy behind their words and who they're going to point to these
important agencies because that'll send a clear sign on whether or not your pro or anti-crypto.
This has been great. So thank you, Representative McHenry for hanging with us today.
in educating us on fit.
I guess the last question as we close here is,
you mentioned a few times that voters should get their voices heard.
How do they do that?
Like, what do we do?
Is it like tweets?
Is it like phone calls?
Are we doing anything on Twitter?
I don't even know sometimes.
Should we show up in person and ask questions?
Like, what is the most effective way for the single issue crypto voter to get their voice heard?
Those are great questions.
You know, look, phone calls matter.
Yes.
Tweeting matters. I see the action online. But we've got a lot of folks saying that these are, you know, these are, yes, they're digital warriors. They're going to be out there tweeting and to their 52 followers on Twitter or on X, right? You know, I mean, or whatever they're going to do. Or they're going to post a mean picture on Instagram. I don't know. But phone calls matter in my office.
Yes, we get lots of emails.
We get lots of letters still.
But phone calls matter.
And, you know, when they call and they're from my district, it does make a huge impact to know that my voters care about the actions I'm taking.
Well, perfect.
Let's edit there.
And I'll leave bankless, the bankless community who are, you know, crypto advocates with an action item.
If you want to hear what your politician, if you want to look up what your politician thinks about crypto.
your local representative, you can go to standwithcryptor.org and go search by the politicians. I will
note Representative McHenry here. He gets an A on that website. We mentioned some other politicians,
Maxine Waters, for instance, just she gets an F right now. But there is a vast swath of undecided
representatives here, and that is the bulk of them. So Hakeem Drefree, who we mentioned is the
Democratic minority lead. It's still undecided. So we don't really know. And that is the territory
for which we need to fight for. Representative McHenry, best of luck on the fit bill.
it's been a pleasure to have you. Thank you so much.
Thanks. Thanks for having me.
Take care.
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