Press "Enter" to skip to content

Crypto Amendment Fails In Senate After Shelby Insists On More Military Spending

Crypto Amendment Fails In Senate After Shelby Insists On More Military Spending
Crypto Amendment Fails In Senate After Shelby Insists On More Military Spending

By Tyler Durden 

Update (1703ET): An amendment designed to narrow the scope of who’s required to report crypto tax data to the IRS has failed in the Senate, despite days of negotiations between competing amendments from Republicans and Democrats.

Sen. Richard Shelby (R-AL)

The failed amendment means the original language with broad oversight over tax reporting is still in the legislation set to pass the Senate, according to Bloomberg.

The amendment was designed to address concerns from the cryptocurrency industry that the original bill would require entities like, miners and software developers, to report tax data to the Internal Revenue Service that they didn’t have access to. The change was proposed after days of negotiations between three Republicans — Pat Toomey, Cynthia Lummis, Rob Portman — and two Democrats, Mark Warner and Kyrsten Sinema.

In a series of procedural maneuvers, Republican Senator Richard Shelby objected because the Democrats refused to take up his amendment for $50 billion in additional military construction money.

That said, both sides and the White House agree on the fundamentals of the amendment, giving lengthy floor speeches on its merits until Shelby threw a wrench in the gears.

Later, Portman said that there are ‘other ways to clarify the bill’s language,’ including speeches on the Senate floor to lay out Treasury department guidance and other factors.

The failure of the amendments is a temporary blow to the crypto industry – as it appears to be only a matter of time before things are sorted out.

In the meantime, cryptos are not amused, though they appear to be rebounding after a sharp drop following the news:

*  *  *

Sen. Patrick Toomey (R-PA), co-sponsor of the more popular cryptocurrency amendment to the infrastructure bill (supported by developers, Ted Cruz, and – oddly, Gene Simmons), announced on Monday that a bipartisan group of Senators has reached a compromise, and will request to pass the amendment via unanimous consent.

“I am delighted to announce we have reached a bipartisan agreement that includes Democrats, Republicans, members of the Senate and the Treasury Dept. on a issue that had been vexing us for a while,” said Toomey, adding “We came together to provide greater clarity on who are the actual brokers of a cryptocurrency. We’re not proposing anything sweeping or anything radical.”

Toomey added that Sen. Majority Leader Chuck Schumer says he won’t block the request, while Schumer said later in the morning that the overall infrastructure bill ‘on a path to pass Tuesday morning.

“There’s still time to adopt this amdt before final passage of this (infrastructure) bill and I’ll be urging my colleagues to join in this bipartisan effort to fix this error,” said Toomey.

Co-sponsor Cynthia M. Lummis (R-WY) said “It’s been a long process with a lot of back and forth.. The Senate has the opportunity to set the stage for successful implementation of digit assets into our financial system.”

More details via Jerry Brito, executive director of DC-based crypto think tank, Coin Center.

Oddly, Toomey and Lummis are both saying they’ll oppose the overall infrastructure deal ‘for unrelated reasons.’

Bitcoin remained strong on the news, much of which was undoubtedly baked in hours ago.

ORIGINAL CONTENT LINK 

Breaking News: