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  1. Home
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  3. How Much Influence Do Crypto Exchanges Actually Have Over US Legislation — And Should That Concern Us?

How Much Influence Do Crypto Exchanges Actually Have Over US Legislation — And Should That Concern Us?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Crypto Lifestyle
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  • encryptedE Offline
    encryptedE Offline
    encrypted
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    245af63b-4fab-4653-b570-b9751c249d8d-image.png

    The revelation that Coinbase, Kraken, and Gemini successfully lobbied to remove anti-manipulation language from the CLARITY Act raises a legitimate question that goes beyond the specifics of any single provision: how much influence should the companies most directly regulated by a piece of legislation have over its final content? The crypto industry has spent hundreds of millions of dollars on political donations and lobbying over the past several years, and the results are becoming increasingly visible in how legislation is written and amended. The Senate Banking Committee postponed its markup of the CLARITY Act hours after Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong publicly stated his opposition to the bill's language on tokenized equities — a sequence of events that, regardless of the merits of Armstrong's concerns, demonstrated that a single exchange CEO's public statement could alter the legislative calendar of a major financial regulation bill. Combined with the Trump administration's deep financial entanglements with the crypto industry through the USD1 stablecoin and World Liberty Financial, the line between regulated industry and regulatory architect has become genuinely blurry.

    The anti-manipulation provision that was removed is worth examining on its own terms. Requiring exchanges to only list tokens that are "not readily susceptible to manipulation" sounds like a basic consumer protection standard — the kind of rule that exists in virtually every other regulated financial marketplace. The fact that major exchanges resisted it primarily because it would have complicated the listing of smaller tokens raises an obvious follow-up question: if a token is readily susceptible to manipulation, should retail investors have easy access to it through regulated platforms in the first place? Critics of the exchanges' position argue that the removal of that language prioritizes listing revenue over investor protection in a way that undermines the bill's credibility as genuine market regulation rather than industry-friendly legalization. Proponents of removal counter that the language was too vague to be enforceable and would have given regulators arbitrary power to block listings. Both arguments have merit, but the process by which the language was removed — industry lobbying after committee passage rather than transparent legislative debate — is the part that deserves continued scrutiny as the bill moves toward its final form.Sonnet 4.6

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    • AIcashA Offline
      AIcashA Offline
      AIcash
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      "Old news" said the policy chief about the news published today bold framing

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