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Elizabeth Warren once said CBDCs have a “great promise”

Elizabeth Warren has spent much of the past decade warning Americans about the risks posed by privately issued and decentralized digital assets.

Over the years, the Massachusetts Democrat has built a reputation as one of crypto industry’s most recognizable critics by persistently linking the emerging industry to money laundering, speculative excess, consumer losses, and sanctions evasion.

Throughout her crusade against Bitcoin, she frequently offered a distinct alternative in a central bank digital currency, or CBDC.

In a 2021 Senate appearance, she stated:

Digital currency from central banks has great promise. Legitimate digital public money could help drive out bogus digital private money. It could help improve financial inclusion, efficiency, and the safety of our financial system – if that digital public money is well-designed and efficiently executed.

However, in a striking legislative twist, Warren has now co-authored and advanced a sweeping bipartisan package that explicitly prohibits the Federal Reserve from issuing that very digital alternative.

Late Monday, the US Senate passed the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act in an overwhelming 85-5 vote. The legislation is primarily designed to alleviate the nationwide housing crisis by boosting construction, streamlining permitting, and barring large private equity firms from buying up single-family homes.

Yet, buried within the hundreds of pages of real estate and zoning reforms is a provision that legally blocks the US central bank from launching a retail digital dollar through at least the end of 2030.

Even after that temporary freeze expires, the Federal Reserve would be barred from moving forward with any substantially similar digital asset without receiving explicit, affirmative authorization from Congress.

Warren’s support for the housing bill does not establish that she has permanently abandoned the CBDC concept or embraced the cryptocurrency industry. However, it places her behind legislation restricting a policy she once described as holding considerable promise for the US banking industry.

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The episode reflects the compromises involved in passing a large bipartisan package. A senator who previously saw a sovereign digital currency as an answer to some of crypto’s failings has accepted its near-term prohibition to advance one of her most consequential domestic policy achievements.

How CBDC restrictions survived the Housing negotiations

The Senate floor debate preceding the vote focused almost entirely on housing affordability, construction barriers, and the role of corporate landlords.

Scott said the measure addressed a market in which housing supply remained inadequate and prices were beyond the reach of many families. Warren presented the bill as evidence that bipartisan legislation did not have to be reduced to a collection of minor compromises.

According to her:

Today’s vote proves that it is possible to find bipartisan, common ground on legislation that actually helps the American people. And, importantly, it proves that bipartisan legislation doesn’t have to be the weakest, most milquetoast agreement that doesn’t offend anyone or do too much to help anyone either.

She highlighted provisions designed to encourage construction, repair existing housing, and prevent some private-equity firms from buying additional single-family homes. Warren described the package as the most significant federal housing legislation in more than three decades.

The CBDC restriction attracted little attention during those public remarks, despite the contrast with Warren’s previous position.

The CBDC language had been added to an earlier Senate version of the legislation as negotiators sought to assemble enough support for the housing provisions in both chambers.

Republican lawmakers have repeatedly characterized a government-issued digital currency as a potential tool for financial surveillance and state control over transactions.

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Notably, the provision remained in the bill during negotiations with the House. This suggests that Warren accepted the restriction as part of the broader agreement, although there is no public evidence that she personally negotiated away a CBDC initiative or that the ban was the specific price demanded for the housing measures.

Meanwhile, the 85-5 vote also should not be treated as a separate Senate referendum on central bank digital currencies. Lawmakers voted on a wide-ranging housing package containing numerous provisions, and their public statements concentrated on its effect on homebuilding and affordability.

The margin nevertheless shows that the CBDC restriction was not objectionable enough to derail legislation supported by an overwhelming number of senators from both parties.

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