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Fortune
Fortune
Leo Schwartz

Congressional Republicans have Gary Gensler in their crosshairs

A man dressed in a dark grey suit and blue tie, holds up his right hand towards an audience of reporters, while he stands behind a podium, speaking into a microphone (Credit: Anna Moneymaker—Getty Images)

Hi, Leo Schwartz here with Wednesday’s Proof of State edition of the newsletter.

Crypto has a new center of gravity in Congress: the House Financial Services Committee. In his new role as chair, crypto advocate Patrick McHenry (R-N.C.) secured the committee’s bona fides by creating a first-of-its-kind subcommittee focused on digital assets. 

Fortune caught up with Rep. French Hill (R-Ark.), the newly appointed chair for the subcommittee, to learn about the group’s priorities ahead of a pivotal congressional session for the crypto industry. Hill is listed by Coinbase as “very supportive” of crypto, but his relationship with the fledgling technology has been more understated than some of his colleagues on Financial Services, such as Tom Emmer (R-Minn.).

Even so, Hill is in a difficult position in the wake of FTX’s collapse and impending trial of its former CEO and onetime Washington mainstay, Sam Bankman-Fried—developments that will make it harder to persuade his skeptical counterparts to pass wide-ranging legislation to oversee the crypto industry.

“I don’t want to throw the baby out with the bathwater thinking through potential next steps in financial technology,” Hill said.  

A key area of focus will be stablecoin regulation. The sector has been a target for McHenry, who worked on a bipartisan bill with the previous chair, Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), although they hit sticking points on key provisions like states’ regulatory authority. Hill said that the subcommittee plans to resume these discussions, including related ones with the Federal Reserve and Treasury Department.

Even higher on the agenda will be a public hearing with the crypto industry’s top nemesis, Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Gary Gensler, whom critics accuse of engaging in “regulation by enforcement.” While Hill was not part of the so-called Blockchain Eight, a bipartisan group of congressmen who drafted a letter seeking clarity on the SEC’s crypto approach in March, Hill is sympathetic to their view.  

“The chairman asserted he was the cop on the beat,” Hill said. “And yet, we didn’t see any evidence of oversight or regulatory jurisdiction in a rigorous way when it came to, particularly, the FTX matter.” 

Hill pointed to a flurry of activity that has since come from the SEC, including charges against Bankman-Fried and top FTX executives, as evidence that the agency could have taken prior steps to prevent the collapse. The question is when Gensler will be called in front of the House Financial Services Committee, which will surely be one of the marquee crypto hearings of the winter.  

Hill said that the committee still has some basic housekeeping to accomplish first, including selecting the full roster of Democrats, which he hopes will happen this week. He brushed off the allegation of some Democrats that it is a conflict of interest for Financial Services members to take donations from crypto companies, as the committee weighs regulation.  

“That’s a responsibility for each member to determine if they take funds from an entity that they now don’t have confidence in,” Hill said. “I don’t think that in and of itself is disqualifying.” 

Leo Schwartz
leo.schwartz@fortune.com
@leomschwartz

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