By Jesse Hamilton

Rep. Tom Emmer (Jesse Hamilton/CoinDesk)
The U.S. Congress' opening priority for the crypto industry is to
quickly finish a stablecoin oversight bill, and the House of
Representatives has released the text of its version on Wednesday, following in the heels of a recent committee approval of its Senate counterpart.
The
House version, introduced by Rep. Bryan Steil, who leads the House
Financial Services Committee's crypto panel, and Rep. French Hill, the
Republican chair of the overall committee, governs the way companies can
issue dollar-denominated digital tokens.
The new version will "close the gap" between the House efforts and the Senate version of the bill, Steil said during a conference appearance Wednesday.
The
Stablecoin Transparency and Accountability for a Better Ledger Economy
(STABLE Act) "is a strong continuation of our work on digital assets in
the last Congress," Hill said in a statement.
The Senate Banking Committee had already advanced its own version of
the legislation with a strong bipartisan vote, so it moves on now to
consideration on the Senate floor. Rep. Tom Emmer, the House majority
whip who has been among Congress' top crypto advocates for years, said
the two bills have "some minor differences that I'm sure can be ironed
out."
Read more: Trump-Tied World Liberty Financial Pitches Its Stablecoin in Washington With Don Jr.
Also on Wednesday, Emmer reintroduced his Securities Clarity Act,
which seeks to define how a crypto asset might fall within the
securities law framework. Emmer introduced the bill, which was part of
last year's Financial Innovation and Technology for the 21st Century Act
(FIT 21), alongside Democratic Representative Darren Soto.
Emmer,
Steil and many other lawmakers involved in crypto efforts on Capitol
Hill all appeared on Wednesday at the DC Blockchain Summit, a crypto
policy event hosted by the Digital Chamber. Most of them shared hopes
that the stablecoin effort would be completed by August.
As the
conference wrapped up, the Senate prepared to vote for a second time on a
Congressional Review Act resolution overturning the IRS' 2024
regulation governing decentralized finance (DeFi) brokers. The Senate and House have both previously passed the resolution, which U.S. President Donald Trump is expected to sign, but the Senate needed vote on it again due to a procedural rule requiring the House to vote first on tax-related issues.
The vote passed, with 70 Senators voting in support and 28 voting against. The previous Senate vote passed 70-27.
In
a statement, DeFi Education Fund Executive Director and Chief Legal
Officer Amanda Tuminelli said the group "commends the bipartisan
supermajority of Congressional leaders who voted in favor of the “DeFi
Broker” CRA resolution, recognizing the severe and far-reaching
consequences of the IRS’ misguided rulemaking."
UPDATE (March 27, 2025, 00:49 UTC): Adds Senate vote update.
Nikhilesh De contributed reporting.