[Congressional Record Volume 171, Number 77 (Thursday, May 8, 2025)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2824-S2825]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                               GENIUS ACT

  Mr. SCOTT of South Carolina. Mr. President, today should have been--
it should have been--a historic day for Americans, a historic day for 
working-class Americans, blue-collar Americans, to see their financial 
system democratized. Well, what does that mean? What it means is a day 
where single mothers like the one that raised me--the day becomes a 
little cheaper, things become a little more affordable.

[[Page S2825]]

Why? Because we were on the verge of doing something that would have 
made our markets safer and cheaper for everyday, working Americans 
across this remarkable land. But, instead, we witnessed a disappointing 
display of political gamesmanship that puts partisan politics above 
policy and obstruction above innovation.
  We could have come together as Republicans and Democrats, not in a 
bipartisan way but in an American way, to deliver real change for the 
American people, real change embedded in the passing of the GENIUS Act. 
But not this day.
  I know that this day was supposed to be special. It was supposed to 
be the day that America as a nation would rise to the occasion of 
innovation over regulation. It was supposed to be the day where we 
would come together in a nonpartisan way, Republicans working with 
Democrats, to make this Nation work better for the blue-collar 
comeback. It was supposed to be that day. But not this day.
  I know what those on the other side would say. Let's be brutally 
honest about it, though. The GENIUS Act was a bipartisan achievement at 
the Banking Committee. It was a bipartisan achievement because we took 
the time, hours upon hours. The Presiding Officer was there. We debated 
day in and day out for weeks and months before we ever had the hearing. 
We offered almost 80 amendments during the session in the Banking 
Committee. We voted on 40 amendments in the Banking Committee. We made 
the decision to make America's economy safer and cheaper for the 
American people.
  But when the lights came on and the cameras were watching, what did 
we see? We saw those same Democrat colleagues who recognized the urgent 
need to bring stablecoins into the clear, responsible, regulatory 
framework--we watched them take a step back and vote against the very 
bill they voted for, the bill they shaped. What changed? What changed? 
What changed? Not the substance. They got more of what they wanted than 
the last five iterations of the legislation. What changed was politics. 
Not policy, not the legislation, not the substance--politics.
  Let's be honest. What we saw today wasn't a vote against the 
legislation. Several iterations--the Presiding Officer's staff, my 
staff, and Democrats' staff spent thousands of hours working on 
improving the bill; up until 2 a.m. last night, staff getting phone 
calls from Democrats about what they needed for the bill to pass.
  It was a vote against President Trump and President Trump's 
legislative agenda. It was a vote to stop President Trump from having a 
victory in the digital asset space. It was a vote against common 
sense--that simple.
  Trump derangement syndrome has once again hijacked responsible 
governance in this Chamber, but unfortunately, unfortunately, it is the 
American people--they are the ones who lose. It is blue-collar, red-
blooded Americans who pay the ultimate price of inaction in this 
Chamber brought about because of politics, not policy.
  It frustrates me. It frustrates me to sit through hours of meetings. 
It frustrates me to watch people look me in my eyes and tell me: We are 
almost there; I just need one more thing. It frustrates me when my 
colleagues seem so sincere that they want the revolution of innovation 
to happen in America. It frustrates me to watch them turn their backs 
on the very people they say they represent. It frustrates me that the 
modern financial tools that make our economy not just faster but 
safer--safer because the blockchain technology makes it safer and more 
inclusive.
  Entrepreneurs and developers want clarity so they can build here in 
the United States of America, not be pushed offshore into a regulatory 
environment that is confusing.
  Let me close with this. The bill delivered on exactly what we all 
want: safety, consumer protections, AML, BSA. All the things that the 
Presiding Officer would want, that I would want, that they would want--
we did it. We did it together. But there is something putrid.
  It is hard to understand how my good friends could walk away from our 
priorities, that my colleagues on the other side of the aisle decided 
to chicken out on safety, on inclusion, and on democratization.
  When the cameras were rolling and the stakes were high, we were left 
high and dry--not because of the policy but because the political 
landscape dictated, demanded that they deny the average American access 
on this day. This is exactly the kind of cynical Washington maneuvering 
that makes people sick to their stomach.
  But I am proud of the work we have done. I am, frankly, proud of the 
work that my Democrat colleagues on the committee offered to make the 
bill better. I am proud of the fact that for a couple of hours in 
America's Capital, we put partisanship to the side. We decided we would 
just do the right thing. I am proud that the Republican Party stood up 
and stood firm on innovation, stood strong on consumer protection, and 
we were there for national security.
  I am not finished fighting. I am frustrated, but we are not defeated. 
We are simply delayed. We are not finished fighting. We will continue 
to work on the digital asset revolution that the American people voted 
for, that they deserve. The need hasn't disappeared, and neither has 
our commitment to American leadership in the digital asset space.
  To those who chose politics over progress today, the American people 
are watching.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.

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