Chamber Mike Johnson (R-La) went to his office at the American Capitol on July 02, 2025 in Washington, DC. Johnson, we
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The future of a trio of bill on cryptographic regulations was questioned Wednesday after a second day of opposition from the Republicans of the Creative Chamber organized the legislation for 10 hours before it became finally advanced.
A new opposition also emerged during the day of the moderate republicans who opposed last minute changes intended to appease an original group of conservative conservatives whose “no” had landed the bills on Tuesday Tuesday
Late Wednesday evening, a group of “no” votes went to Yesses, and the room finally approved the rules for debate for crypto bills and a set of credit from the adjacent Pentagon.
Wednesday’s marathon vote set the longest open vote record in the history of the modern chamber, a record that had been established earlier in the month.
The president of the House Mike Johnson, R.-La., can lose only a handful of Republicans on any measure while adopting the legislation during a party line vote.
Regardless of the late Wednesday evening, the two -day dead end on cryptographic regulations have fueled doubts as to whether the House’s republican conference can align the different opinions of its members on cryptographic regulations enough to adopt the final versions of the bills which will ultimately be promulgated.
For the crypto industry – which gave tens of millions of dollars to the members of the crypt during the last campaign cycle – the fight to move the bills was a strong disappointment which threatened to precipitate the hopes of obtaining a framework of cryptographic regulation adopted during what had been presented as a “cryptographic week”.
Wednesday’s new trips also raised questions about the influence of President Donald Trump’s influence on the members of the party he leads.
This second attempt to approve the rules intervened after the 11th hour negotiations and Trump’s intervention on Tuesday evening seemed to put a group of retained on board.
Trump met in the oval office on Tuesday evening with a dozen conservative republicans.
Subsequently, he said that they had “all agreed to vote” in favor of the rule, according to a social post of truth at the end of the evening.
But the new opposition on Wednesday came from legislators on key committees which had the author of the legislation – not only the conservative Hardliners.
According to Politico, members of the Financial Services Financial Services Commission have opposed some of the last -minute adjustments to merge two of the bills.
The three bills in question include one, the law on engineering, which adopted the Senate in June, and two others who first move through the Chamber: the Clarity Act and a bill which would prevent the Federal Reserve from establishing a digital currency of the Central Bank.


