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Caroline Crenshaw

Interest groups call on US Senate to confirm Caroline Crenshaw to SEC

A letter sent to the Senate signed by more than 40 organizations suggested that Donald Trump might not abide by tradition and nominate Democrats to the SEC at all.

Consumer advocacy organization Public Citizen and other interest groups are urging lawmakers in the United States to act and confirm Caroline Crenshaw to a second term at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) before the next Congress is sworn in.

In a Dec. 12 letter to the US Senate, more than 40 organizations asked lawmakers to vote yes on Crenshaw’s nomination, which could have her working at the SEC until 2029.

The Senate Banking Committee was expected to decide on the SEC commissioner’s nomination on Dec. 11 before a postponement, having many questioning whether lawmakers have enough time to confirm Crenshaw in the current session of Congress.

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Quantum computing will fortify Bitcoin signatures: Adam Back

Dark money group tied to crypto tries to quash SEC nomination vote

The Cedar Innovation Foundation launched an attack ad ahead of a congressional committee vote on Caroline Crenshaw's renomination as an SEC commissioner.

An organization that has been lobbying the United States government for policies favoring the crypto industry is pushing for lawmakers in a congressional committee to oppose the renomination of Caroline Crenshaw at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

In a Dec. 9 notice, the Cedar Innovation Foundation said it had launched a “five-figure, multi-channel” digital campaign urging US lawmakers to reject Crenshaw’s nomination for a second term at the SEC. The group claimed that the SEC commissioner was “more anti-crypto” than Chair Gary Gensler on policies like spot Bitcoin (BTC) exchange-traded funds. 

“Last month, Americans voted for pro-innovation leadership, and this Sherrod Brown bait-and-switch directly defies the will of the voters,” said Cedar. “We urge lawmakers to vote ‘no.’”

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Quantum computing will fortify Bitcoin signatures: Adam Back

Brian Armstrong Calls SEC Commissioner Up for Re-Nomination a ‘Failure,’ Urges Senate To Vote Her Out

Brian Armstrong Calls SEC Commissioner Up for Re-Nomination a ‘Failure,’ Urges Senate To Vote Her Out

Coinbase chief executive Brian Armstrong is lashing out against a U.S. Securities and Exchange (SEC) commissioner who is up for re-nomination. Armstrong argues on the social media platform X that Caroline A. Crenshaw has been “a failure” as commissioner and should be voted out. “She tried to block the Bitcoin ETFs (exchange-traded funds) and was […]

The post Brian Armstrong Calls SEC Commissioner Up for Re-Nomination a ‘Failure,’ Urges Senate To Vote Her Out appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

Quantum computing will fortify Bitcoin signatures: Adam Back

Crypto industry fears ‘vehemently anti crypto’ Caroline Crenshaw SEC vote

SEC commissioner Caroline Crenshaw, who is widely known for opposing the spot Bitcoin ETFs, is up for renomination, and the crypto industry fears her re-election.

The United States Senate Banking Committee will vote on Dec. 11 whether to renominate Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) commissioner Caroline Crenshaw, a vocal crypto skeptic. Several industry executives have voiced frustration over the possibility of her re-election.

Crenshaw was one of two SEC commissioners to vote against the approval of spot Bitcoin (BTC) exchange-traded funds (ETF) in January.

“Caroline Crenshaw is anti-crypto. She even embarrassingly opposed Bitcoin ETFs. The SEC has to change,” crypto exchange Coinbase president and COO Emilie Choi said in a Dec. 7 X post.

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Quantum computing will fortify Bitcoin signatures: Adam Back

Spot Ether ETFs will come down to a 5-person vote: Gensler the decider?

It was speculated that Gensler’s vote secured the launch of spot Bitcoin ETFs in January — and the same five commissioners are set to vote on Ether ETFs this week.

The fate of spot Ether (ETH) exchange-traded funds could be decided this week by a single vote from Gary Gensler, the chair of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission — if history is any indication.

In January, the approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs came down to a five-commissioner panel. Two crypto-friendly commissioners, Hester Pierce and Mark Uyeda, voted to approve ETFs, while Commissioners Caroline Crenshaw and Jaime Lizárraga voted against them.

Gensler also voted to approve it, leading many to believe his vote ultimately secured approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs, which were approved with a 3-2 vote on Jan. 10, 2024.

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Quantum computing will fortify Bitcoin signatures: Adam Back

SEC Commissioner says ‘safe harbor’ laws would’ve made ICO problems worse

Instead of a safe harbor for crypto firms, SEC Commissioner Caroline Crenshaw called for a “bridge” in which crypto firms work with the SEC to determine compliance plans.

Caroline Crenshaw, a commissioner at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has said the “safe harbor” proposal would have exacerbated the problems seen during the initial coin offering (ICO) boom of 2017 and 2018.

Crenshaw made the remarks during the annual “SEC Speaks” event this month, and posted her speech to the SEC website on Oct. 12. The Commissioner argues that the impact on investors and markets would have been far greater if safe harbor provisions were in place at the time:

“I think the results would have been even worse for investors and the markets. ICOs and other digital asset offerings raised billions from investors, but most never delivered on their promises. Investors suffered the losses.”

“And I think it is not a coincidence that these problematic offerings pre-dated and continued through the beginning of a multi-year downturn in the value of digital assets, sometimes known as the crypto-winter,” she added.

The safe harbor proposal has been advocated by crypto-friendly SEC commissioner Hester Peirce. The proposal seeks to grant network developers a three-year grace period to build a decentralized network without fearing SEC legal action, but has yet to be embraced by most of the other commissioners.

Peirce, or “Crypto Mom”, put forward a revised version earlier this year in March. Cointelegraph reported on Oct. 5 that North Carolina House Representative Patrick McHenry also put forward a three-year safe harbor proposal in a draft bill of the “Clarity for Digital Tokens Act of 2021.”

Crenshaw argues that instead of pushing the crypto sector towards compliance, the safe harbor proposal would put investors' capital at further risk as crypto tokens would be deemed outside of the jurisdiction of the SEC for “several years.”

“I also worry that relaxing regulatory requirements in markets prone to investor protection failures, limited investor redress options because of pseudonymity and disintermediation, and market manipulation, cannot sustain investor confidence or yield lasting broad adoption,” she said.

Related: Gensler confirms SEC won’t ban crypto... but Congress could

Instead of a safe harbor, Crenshaw called for a “bridge” in which token issuers and other crypto firms work with SEC to outline plans for regulatory compliance, or discuss specific exemptions when they are deemed “appropriate,”:

“I believe that if market participants accept proactive responsibility for compliance, we can build a bridge that promotes innovation while preserving market integrity and providing the investor protections needed for these new markets to grow.”

“If you likely fall within our jurisdiction, work with us to describe your plan to comply or explain why some exemption is appropriate,” she added.

Crenshaw’s remarks also echo the sentiments of chair Gary Gensler, who has regularly called for crypto firms to work with the SEC and register with the regulatory body.

Quantum computing will fortify Bitcoin signatures: Adam Back