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7) So, what's most likely to happen now is that there won't be much time for amendments, and there might not be sufficient quorum to even bring them to vote; if they have to get through the committee, they'll be easy to veto there.
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8) Which gets to another important point. The first thing that crypto had to do here was make sure that Washington was aware there was a provision in the bill that needed clarification. That was successful! Washington is well aware now.
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9) But there are competing interests on the bill, and the multiple different amendments flying around are confusing. Republican senators have a clear line: they want to slow down and edit the bill anyway; and the majority of their members would be happy with Wyden/Lummis/etc.
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10) Majority leadership is more likely caught between a rock and a hard place here. There are competing factions (Wyden / Yellen), and it's a small piece of a large bill. Their goal is to get the bill passed and move on with business, and not have to deal with this battle.
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11) And so more and louder voices saying the bill's crypto provision is bad might not be what's important right now. The more difficult this is, and the more contentious, the more leadership is incentivized to say "fuck it, no amendments, we have to move on".
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12) What's really needed here is clear, reasonable, fair compromise that can create a compelling way forward. I'm not sure what that is! But if it were *me* drafting the bill, I guess I'd try to take a step back and try a new approach.
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13) Maybe try something like this? ---- a) To clarify, the original language means that centralized US-servicing crypto exchanges, for instance Coinbase, Kraken, FTX US, Gemini, Binance US, etc. will be treated as a broker for 1099 purposes
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14) b) To further clarify, neither the original bill text nor this amendment are taking a position either way on any tax related duties of people or companies primarily involved in blockchain validation, noncustodial wallets, or other areas of decentralized crypto finance.
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15) The goal here: (i) make it clear that centralized US person facing crypto exchanges have to be filing 1099s, which makes sense (ii) kick the can down the road on messier questions
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16) Kicking the can down the road isn't ideal. But it's better than having to hash out consensus protocols, noncustodial wallets, developers, and other things at the last minute. And at least it's clear what the bill would/wouldn't do, rather than leaving it vague.
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Replying to
18) But, fundamentally: the biggest thing right now isn't for crypto to "get its voice heard". It's to come forward with reasonable, good faith compromises, and make it clear that's the goal.
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