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Congress Sends Anti-CBDC Housing Bill To Trump After House Vote

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TL;DR

  • The House passed the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act after earlier Senate approval.
  • Crypto-focused provisions would restrict federal CBDC development until 2030.
  • The bill now heads to President Trump after rare bipartisan support.

Anti-CBDC Language Moves To The President

Congress has sent the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act to President Trump after the House passed the bill with overwhelming bipartisan support. While the legislation is primarily focused on housing affordability, it also contains a crypto-relevant provision restricting federal central bank digital currency development through 2030.

That makes the bill important for digital-asset policy even though crypto is not the headline issue. The measure puts anti-CBDC language inside a broader bipartisan housing package, giving the provision a much stronger legislative vehicle than a standalone crypto bill might have had.

Why The CBDC Provision Matters

The U.S. CBDC debate has become one of the clearest dividing lines in digital-asset policy. Supporters of a digital dollar argue that public money should evolve with the payments system. Critics warn that a retail CBDC could give the government too much visibility or control over everyday financial activity.

The restriction does not ban private stablecoins, tokenized bank deposits or blockchain-based settlement experiments. It targets the federal government’s ability to issue or develop a central bank digital dollar during the covered period. For crypto advocates, that distinction matters because it leaves room for private-sector digital money while limiting a Fed-backed competitor.

Housing Bill Becomes Crypto Policy Vehicle

The political maneuver is just as important as the substance. By embedding CBDC restrictions inside a popular housing bill, lawmakers avoided relying on a narrower crypto-only package. That reflects a pattern in Washington: crypto provisions often move fastest when attached to broader legislation with bipartisan momentum.

For markets, the immediate price impact may be limited. But the policy signal is clear. The U.S. is moving toward a framework that is friendlier to private digital assets and more skeptical of a government-issued retail CBDC.

This coverage is based on information from Reuters.

This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.

This report is based on information from Reuters, available at Reuters

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