House breaks record for longest vote on rule for crypto bills
UNITED STATES, JUL 16 – The House GOP overcame opposition from conservative factions to advance three bills regulating stablecoins and blocking a Federal Reserve digital dollar without congressional approval.
- Rumeysa Ozturk, a Tufts University graduate student, was held for six weeks after being targeted by the Trump administration, which claimed she supported Hamas without providing evidence.
- Supporters of Ozturk argued that her detention was a result of her op-ed calling for divestment from companies linked to Israel.
- The Trump administration admitted in court that it targeted Ozturk and thousands of others through Canary Mission, which labels individuals as anti-Israel.
- Advocates for Ozturk expressed concerns about free speech rights being threatened and criticized the administration for pursuing innocent individuals over political disagreements.
21 Articles
21 Articles
‘They took it to the next level’: Emmer breaks down the Republican crypto rebellion
The NewsThe House GOP whip is warning conservative holdouts that their public rebellion on Wednesday — which forced the chamber into its longest vote in history — may not “100% guarantee” a clean victory on their cryptocurrency priorities.Rep. Tom Emmer of Minnesota said he “was, frankly, flattered” when Freedom Caucus members seized on his legislation banning a Central Bank Digital Currency to hold up two other digital assets bills and a defens…
Crypto Bills Advance After Longest House Vote in History
The U.S. House of Representatives advanced three major crypto bills late Wednesday after the longest vote in House history, a session that lasted nearly 10 hours and ended with a 217-212 vote. The three bills advanced for debate are the GENIUS Act, which sets rules for stablecoin issuers, the CLARITY Act, which defines which tokens will be regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)…
House Crypto Vote Breaks Records as GENIUS Act Inches Closer to Trump's Desk
In what's now officially the longest vote in the history of the U.S. House of Representatives, lawmakers stalled for over seven hours and 24 minutes Wednesday night over a cryptocurrency rule vote
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