The new guy in the cryptography of President Donald Trump, Patrick Witt, picks up the stick of his predecessor Bo hines in the cut-off legislators to finish American crypto policies and push regulators to put the new law on Stablecoin, he said in an interview with Coindesk.
Working under the cryptography of the administration, David Sacks, Witt is the new point of contact for cryptographic questions at the White House, after having taken over after the brief mandate of his predecessor, Hines, who worked for the stable giant. While Hines saw the conversion of the Stablecoin effort of the Congress into Law and was able to attend the White House ceremony to cement it, it left shortly after, leaving a long list of crypto for Witt.
“There is no decline here,” said Witt, who was raised to work last month, just two weeks after the administration has published its large -scale strategy report to tackle the American cryptography policy. “We keep the metal pedal with all the various initiatives on the legislative front and the inter -site actions recommended in the report.”
Witt will speak during the Coindesk policy and regulation event in Washington, DC on Wednesday.
In his first interview since he became executive director of the council of advisers of the president of digital assets, he declared that his three main priorities are the work of the Senate on the legislation on the structure of the market, obtaining a rapid implementation of the law on stablescoin known by the name of guidance and establishment of national innovation for American stablecoins (GENIUS) Act and set up a stock of federal crypto.
On the legislative work of the Senate, given last week when a bill bill emerged from the senatorial banking committee, Witt said that this latest version had shown “significant improvements”.
“Generally, the reception has been positive,” he noted, adding that those who worked there are looking for the comments of the Democrats, because several of them must be on board so that it adopts the margin of 60 vote. “You know, our interest here is to make sure that we listen to all the parts in space, that we work to get something that advances the ball,” said the former quarter of the college for Yale’s Bulldogs.
Although the effort has missed the period of August initially fixed by Trump, Witt said that the White House “maintains the pressure on this side”.
He said that his office was in “regular contact” with the two committees working on the bill. The banking panel has circulated its project, but the Senate Committee for Agriculture is in a train. Both will have to complete the legislation, open their efforts for the contribution of the members and vote to transmit them to the Senate before the Senate can take a final vote – where it will take considerable bipartite support to move forward. And Witt said that the market on the market structure written by the Senate should be something that the House of Representatives may approve without more bargaining, even if the House has already approved its own version, the law on the clarity of the digital asset market.
“We are convinced that what comes out in the Senate will ultimately be a product that the Chamber can also support,” he said, which previously happened with the Engineering Law-a Senate bill that the House of Representatives approved with a large bipartite majority.
Until now, one of the most urgent general objections expressed by Congress Democrats has been Trump’s personal participation in industry, which would have won the president and his billions of family dollars of income, investment gains and action participations. This argument of conflict of interest is a Witt – a bit like its predecessor – rejected as illegitimate.
“This is to say that a private conflict when we strengthen America’s economy,” said Witt. “It is a victory for America. It is not a victory for a particular group of people.”
Among the initiatives of the President’s most prominent Crypto, he was his order calling for the formation of a so-called Bitcoin Strategic Reserve which would hold Bitcoin at Government Assembly as a long -term investment. The US Treasury Department has plunged into how to establish a bitcoin stock and a separate reserve of all other types of cryptocurrency.
“It is an absolute priority for me, personally, for this office, for the administration,” said Witt. He added that it was not yet there, because the work “presents new legal questions that we just need to be resolved”. He said that the White House also targets the legislative support of the congress, so his office strives to understand how to go to a “passable” bill which establishes the law in law.
And he had no new details to share on how the administration could continue to grow this Bitcoin fund beyond the government’s bitcoin crises with which he will start the reserve, only that the administration plans “certain creative ways that we can obtain in accumulation with the existing authorities”.
Compared to Hines, Witt has a deeper well of political experience and the executive branch to be drawn. He spent three years at McKinsey & Co. and served stays at the staff management office during the first Trump presidency and some time at the Ministry of Defense, where he was an assistant under-secretary. This initiate context can help him help inaugurate federal regulators in the implementation of Stablecoin’s law that Trump has already signed, he said.
“I know what it looks like agencies,” he said. “So I hope I can bring a good perspective to what is achievable there and how to approach it in the right way.”
But the Senate’s continuous response to the Clarity Act is the most urgent element on the agenda.
“Genius was a huge victory, but as David Sacks likes to say, he approaches a relatively small part of the global cryptography market,” said Witt. “This invoice addresses the rest-call it 80%. So it is huge, and we want to make sure that we do not drop the ball, that we do it.”
Read more: Who is Patrick Witt, President Trump’s next senior advisor on crypto?