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US Senate has scheduled 5 procedural votes for the GENIUS stablecoin bill today

In this post:

  • The US Senate is advancing the GENIUS Act, a landmark bill to regulate dollar-pegged stablecoins, with five key procedural votes scheduled.
  • Senate Democrats remain divided, with Senator Elizabeth Warren opposing the bill over concerns about consumer protection and national security.
  • US Bancorp signals renewed interest in stablecoin development amid shifting regulatory sentiment and Senate momentum.

On Thursday, the US Senate will hold five procedural voting sessions toward passing the GENIUS Act, a landmark stablecoin bill to establish the country’s first regulatory framework for dollar-pegged digital tokens.

The Senate’s scheduled agenda, confirmed by the Republican Cloakroom Staff, will include roll call votes beginning at 12:30 PM ET. The votes are slated to determine the fate of both amendments and the legislation, known as S.1582 or the GENIUS Act, which stands for “Guaranteeing Every Nation a United and Inclusive Stablecoin.”

Senate five-vote procedure precedes law passage

According to Senate session records, the confirmed voting schedule included the confirmation of William Long to lead the Internal Revenue Service, followed by actions tied directly to the GENIUS Act. 

Specifically, senators will vote on whether to table Senator John Thune’s amendment, waive the Budget Act in relation to Senator Jeff Merkley’s budget point of order, adopt Senator Bill Hagerty’s substitute amendment, and invoke cloture on the final bill as amended.

According to Fox Business correspondent Eleanor Terrett, Thursday’s success will open the floor for a full Senate vote next week. “We’ll know on Thursday afternoon when leadership puts out the agenda for next week,” Terrett said on X.

Wednesday’s preliminary vote saw 68-30 support to move forward with Hagerty’s substitute amendment, which introduced several changes to bring Senate Democrats to the table. 

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Hagerty, a Republican from Tennessee and the bill’s chief architect said the amendments were a “common-sense, bipartisan approach to regulating stablecoins.” He told Senators that the amended legislation has “enough oversight” to prevent digital financial systems from operating without regulatory clarity.

Democrats divided, Senator Warren leads opposition

Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), a senior member of the Senate Banking Committee, is leading a group of liberals in opposing the GENIUS Act. On Wednesday, Warren lambasted the bill and called it “weak and dangerous.”

This legislation is riddled with loopholes and contains weak safeguards for consumers, national security, and financial stability,” Warren said on the floor. She accused fellow Democrats of ceding too much ground to Republicans. “Over the past few months Democrats seem to have forgotten that we actually have some power. This is an opportunity to use that power.”

Warren specifically attacked the decision to move forward without guarantees of amendment votes, blaming the leadership for breaking promises. 

Still, eighteen Democrats broke with Warren and Minority Leader Chuck Schumer to advance the substitute amendment. Left-wing votes in favor came from Senators Andy Kim and John Hickenlooper, who had previously voted against advancing the bill. 

If no amendment deal or unanimous time agreement emerges, the Senate could hold a final vote on the bill as early as Monday.

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US Bancorp sets sights on stablecoin market position

Outside Capitol Hill, at the Morgan Stanley US Financials Conference on Wednesday, Bancorp CEO Gunjan Kedia revealed that her company is reevaluating its stablecoin ambitions in light of recent congressional developments.

Kedia said that interest in the bank’s institutional crypto custody business, which launched in 2021 but faltered during the Biden administration, has been revived under the current crypto-friendly regulatory environment.

The product didn’t really take off because the regulatory regime at that point was very uncertain for large institutional investors,” she explained. “That product is back, and we are very able to provide it.”

Kedia described the “bigger conversation” now as being about payments involving stablecoins. She said the fifth largest bank in the US is “studying and watching,” and may create its own stablecoin with the infrastructure necessary to support such a product.

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