Crypto-friendly Congressman Tom Emmer has slammed U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) chair Gary Gensler for his approach to cryptocurrency regulation, labeling him as a “bad faith regulator.”
Great interview by @laurashin with @GOPMajorityWhip! Congress is working in their districts this week and next, but expect a VERY busy last 2 weeks of April for crypto policy as legislation and oversight of the regulators ramps up. Stay tuned https://t.co/ZSsTFJ9pt7
During an April 7 appearance on the Unchained podcast hosted by author and crypto journalist Laura Shin, Emmer didn’t mince his words as he questioned Gensler’s oversight on the crypto sector:
Emmer pointed to the example of Coinbase, which before being slapped with a Wells Notice by the SEC in March, was actively trying to work with the agency by getting compliance feedback on staking products, among other things.
“Gary Gensler might have an open door, but it is an enter-at-your-own-risk door, because what he does is, despite several meetings over several months, Gary Gensler’s SEC refused to provide feedback,” he said, adding that:
Since Gensler took over the helm of the SEC back in April 2021, he has repeatedly suggested that the agency has an amicable ‘open door policy’ and called on crypto firms to register with the SEC to maintain compliance with securities law.
This is mostly down to his view that nearly all crypto assets apart from Bitcoin (BTC) are classified as securities, and thus the sector should be primarily regulated by the SEC.
Related: US lawmaker accuses FDIC of using banking instability to attack crypto
Despite this, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has highlighted the difficulty of dealing with the SEC on several occasions, while other
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