
Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson has blasted Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse for supporting a flawed crypto market structure bill, warning that poor regulation could become permanent.
Summary
- Hoskinson slammed Garlinghouse for supporting ‘flawed’ crypto bill
- Ripple’s CEO asserted that effective regulation is better than continued uncertainty.
- Debate highlights growing tensions between DeFi protection and trade-offs for clarity
A new public clash has erupted between two of the biggest voices in the crypto industry, as Cardano (ADA) founder Charles Hoskinson criticized Ripple (XRP) CEO Brad Garlinghouse over the latest US legislation on crypto market structure.
The dispute highlights growing tensions within the industry over whether crypto should accept “good enough” rules now, or fight harder for stronger, fairer frameworks that don’t disproportionately benefit traditional financial operators.
Hoskinson’s comments come after Garlinghouse praised lawmakers for coming up with “workable frameworks,” suggesting that “clarity beats chaos” and that remaining issues could be resolved during the markup process. Hoskinson strongly rejected this approach, arguing that any compromise on flawed regulation could lock the industry into long-term damage.
Charles Hoskinson, key points of the debate
- Hoskinson criticized Garlinghouse for supporting a bill that many believe could favor banks and incumbents over open innovation in crypto.
- The Ripple CEO supported “actionable frameworks,” emphasizing that regulatory clarity is better than uncertainty.
- Hoskinson warned that passing “imperfect” legislation could be a lasting mistake if it expands regulator power and limits DeFi
Hoskinson pushes back “Clarity Beats Chaos”
In a livestream shared from his official X account, Hoskinson scoffed at the idea of accepting a flawed bill simply because it creates a clearer regulatory path. His main argument was simple: Once a framework becomes law, it can be extremely difficult to reverse or reform, leaving the crypto industry stuck under restrictive rules for years.
Hoskinson described this moment as being more important than a political victory or defeat. Instead, he described it as an existential decision about whether crypto remains a layer of open, permissionless innovation, or whether it becomes another regulated system shaped primarily by legacy financial interests.
What Garlinghouse Supports (And Why It Matters)
Garlinghouse’s position reflects a more pragmatic strategy: secure a viable baseline for regulation now, then refine it over time. Proponents of this approach argue that the lack of clarity has hurt U.S.-based innovation, pushed talent overseas and created uncertainty for companies trying to operate legally.
Garlinghouse’s comments signal optimism that lawmakers can resolve issues through the markup process rather than scrapping the framework altogether. From Ripple’s perspective, any progress reducing regulatory confusion can be seen as a net positive, even if the bill isn’t perfect from day one.
The DeFi fight against incumbents is the real battle
Hoskinson’s frustration also reflects a broader industry concern: that a market structure bill could unintentionally (or deliberately) tilt the balance of decentralized finance toward heavily regulated institutions, including banks and centralized intermediaries.
While regulation can speed up adoption, the details matter. If the rules increase compliance constraints for new projects while granting advantages to large incumbents, innovation could slow and smaller ecosystems could struggle to compete. That’s why this debate is creating friction even among pro-crypto executives who generally agree that clearer regulation is needed.
What to expect next
For now, the clash between Hoskinson and Garlinghouse is a sign of what’s to come: more public disagreements as crypto executives try to influence how U.S. regulations are shaped. One part wants an immediate structure, even if imperfect. The other side believes it is worth enduring the uncertainty to avoid cementing rules that could restrict the future of crypto.


