House Republicans Make New Case On Stablecoin

Last updated: June 9, 2025, 05:17

House Republicans Make New Case On Stablecoin

Stablecoin rules take shape as US lawmakers push new bill

House Republicans’ Second Attempt at Stablecoin

House Stablecoin Bill Advances in US House With Support of Trump

On Monday afternoon

House Republicans Make Case on Stablecoin Bill After - CoinDesk

On Monday afternoon, Republicans on the House Financial Services Committee revealed a discussion draft of legislation to regulate stablecoin issuers. The new draft by

Crypto Bill Gains Bipartisan Support as Stablecoin Rule

On

Republicans on the House Financial Services Committee are taking another swing at stablecoin legislation with a discussion draft revealed Monday afternoon, which may

House Panel OKs Bipartisan Bill for Federal Stablecoin Rules

On 2 April, the House Financial Services Committee voted in favour of the stablecoin bill. This included support from 27 Republicans and 5 Democrats. Before the vote

Democrats called for Republicans to

House Republicans Release New Bill on Stablecoin Regulation

Democrats called for Republicans to come back to a previous compromise bill hashed out by the previous heads of the panel, Democrat Maxine Waters and Republican Patrick

Republicans and Democrats on the House Financial Services Committee are at odds over how stablecoins should be regulated. Those divisions were on display at a hearing

Cetoex News

Cetoex News – Republicans on the House Financial Services Committee are once again looking to establish regulations for stablecoins this week. A discussion draft bill is now

Republicans and some Democratic supporters said stablecoins present an opportunity for global transactions that are far cheaper and faster than existing bank-based

House Republicans Make New Case on Stablecoin

Designed to create a dedicated

As House Panel Kicks Tires on Stablecoin Bill, Old-School - CoinDesk

Designed to create a dedicated federal framework specifically for stablecoin regulation, the bill has reportedly gained significant bipartisan support. Both Republicans and

House Republicans and Democrats can't agree on how to regulate