The House of Representatives of the United States made the first important decision to erase the work of the Internal Revenue Service to impose a tax regime on decentralized financial platforms (DEFI) in the last days of the administration of former president Joe Biden.
The Chamber’s Road and Meaning Committee – The panel responsible for supervising the IRS of the Treasury Department – has advanced a resolution in a 26-16 vote to cancel the IRS transaction report policy under the Congressal Review Act. Such a effort requires majority approval in the House and the Senate before a presidential signature would move the final, and the case now passes to the global chamber.
In December, the IRS had approved a system according to which the cryptographic industry affirms that the forces define the protocols in a declaration regime designed for brokers, threatening the way in which these protocols work and also include a wide range of entities which are not brokers at all. Almost all the major names in the cryptography sector signed a blockchain letter letter last week calling for the elimination of this rule.
Read more: The cryptographic industry asks the congress to delete the rule of the IRS DEFI broker
Senator Ted Cruz, a Texas republican, organized a version of the Senate of the Arc resolution to reduce the IRS rule.
“We have to adopt this resolution to avoid this nightmare for American taxpayers and for IRS,” said representative Mike Carey, an Ohio republican who was pressure for the congress to be reduced, which, according to him, submerged the tax agency.
Democratic representative Richard Neal of Massachusetts a The Republican push.
“The bill from which we are seized today repeated the reasonable and important regulations of the Treasury ensuring that taxpayers respect their tax declaration obligations and do not judge the law by selling cryptocurrency without reporting the gains,” he said. “It’s really as simple.”
The elimination of the specific tax approach to decentralized cryptographic platforms would reduce US revenues by around $ 3.9 billion over a decade.
Representative Jason Smith, Republican President of the Missouri Committee, accused the IRS of going behind “the letter of the law” when he approved the rule during the last days of Biden in office.
“Not only is it unfair, but it is impossible,” he said.