Representative Warren Davidson is planning to introduce legislation to remove the position of Chairman in the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC). He wants the position to be replaced by an executive director who reports to the board. This move is apparently an answer to the regulatory overreach of the agency. If passed, it will remove the current chair, Gary Gensler, a known anti-crypto regulator.
SEC is in the Frontline Against Crypto
The crypto industry has been under siege for some time and the SEC is doing everything it its power to stifle this emerging technology. Ripple Labs, the company behind XRP, has been battling the SEC in the courts since 2022. The SEC is accusing Ripple Labs of selling the XRP without registering it as security. Paxos, the issuer of the stablecoin BUSD, is also being accused by the SEC of issuing unregistered security.
The SEC’s Chairman, Gary Gensler, is probably one of the most unpopular government officials in the crypto space due to his restrictive stance against cryptocurrencies. He believes that a lot of digital assets can be classified as securities, thus falling under the purview of the U.S. Securities Exchange Commission (SEC). His stance is supposedly for protecting consumers investing in crypto
The strict crypto stance is not confined to the SEC alone. The Whitehouse itself has given a roadmap to mitigate pitfalls associated with cryptocurrencies
One of the SEC Commissioners is Against Regulatory Overreach
SEC Commissioner Hester M. Pierce, a known crypto-friendly regulator, has been at the forefront of defending innovations like digital assets against the SEC’s regulatory overreach. In her latest statement, she strongly opposed the overregulating of emerging technology to extinction. This is her reaction to the SEC’s move to amend the definition of an exchange.
Thank you, Mr. Chair. Stagnation, centralization, expatriation, and extinction are the watchwords of this release. Rather than embracing the promise of new technology as we have done in the past, here we propose to embrace stagnation, force centralization, urge expatriation, and welcome (the) extinction of new technology. Accordingly, I dissent.
(Pierce, 2023, “Rendering Innovation Kaput…”)
As highlighted in Rep. Davidson’s tweet, Commissioner Pierce is disagreeing with how the SEC is treating entrepreneurs who are trying to comply with existing laws. The SEC is using its powers to threaten innovators instead of helping.
Today’s Commission tells entrepreneurs trying to do new things in our markets to come in and register. When entrepreneurs find they cannot, the Commission dismisses the possibility of making practical adjustments to our registration framework to help entrepreneurs register, and instead rewards their good faith with an enforcement action. Today’s Commission treats the notice-and-comment rulemaking process not as a conversation, but as a threat.
(Pierce, 2023, “Rendering Innovation Kaput…”)
The Current SEC Organizational Chart
The SEC’s organizational chart shows that there are five commissioners on top. These five commissioners are appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. They each serve for five years. The Chairman, which is the SEC’s top executive, is also appointed by the President. If Rep. Davidson’s plan is passed, then the chairmanship position will be taken out and will be replaced by an executive director who reports to the board.
How Will it Affect the Crypto Industry?
If the law is passed, then it will shorten the appointment of Gary Gensler who is expected to complete his 5-year term in 2026. His stepping down will probably be happily accepted by the crypto industry. But the question is what will happen after he steps down. Will the new SEC leadership look at innovations, like crypto, as an opportunity, rather than a risk to be pushed out?
The aftermath is anybody’s guess. The bigger game plan is to look at pushing for regulatory clarity that will protect emerging technologies, like cryptocurrencies, instead of stifling their growth. Hopefully, those in the government will realize that the U.S. did not become an economic powerhouse by fighting innovations. The digital asset industry is the future and it is up to the country if it wants to be part of it.
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