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Policy

Senators Urge Treasury to Keep State Stablecoin Oversight

A group of U.S. senators is pressing the Treasury Department to ensure that state-level regulators retain a meaningful role in overseeing stablecoin issuers under the GENIUS Act, the landmark

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 16, 2026
3 min read
NEWS
Senators Urge Treasury to Keep State Stablecoin Oversight
CryptoCompass editorial visual for policy coverage.

A group of U.S. senators is pressing the Treasury Department to ensure that state-level regulators retain a meaningful role in overseeing stablecoin issuers under the GENIUS Act, the landmark legislation working its way through Congress.

The lawmakers warned that Treasury's rulemaking process risks sidelining state regulatory frameworks that have governed money transmission and digital asset activity for years, according to a CoinDesk report published June 16.

Why Senators Want State Regulators at the Table

The GENIUS Act, which establishes a federal framework for payment stablecoin issuers, requires Treasury to set broad principles for evaluating whether a state's existing regulatory regime meets federal standards. Treasury opened that process with an April 2026 Federal Register notice seeking public comment on those principles.

The senators' concern is straightforward: if Treasury sets the bar in a way that few or no state programs can meet, stablecoin oversight would effectively consolidate at the federal level. That would undermine the dual banking tradition that has defined U.S. financial regulation for over a century.

For stablecoin issuers currently licensed under state money transmitter laws, the outcome matters directly. A framework that preserves state pathways gives issuers flexibility in where and how they obtain authorization, while a framework that marginalizes states could force consolidation under a single federal chartering regime.

How the GENIUS Act Could Reshape Federal-State Balance

The GENIUS Act envisions a system where both federally chartered and state-regulated stablecoin issuers can operate, provided state regimes meet minimum standards. Treasury's role is to define what "substantially similar" means in practice.

State regulators have pushed back against any interpretation that would hollow out their authority. The Conference of State Bank Supervisors, which represents state financial regulators, has been actively engaged in the rulemaking process, advocating for standards that recognize existing state capabilities rather than imposing requirements designed around a federal model.

The debate mirrors a broader tension in crypto regulation between those who favor a single national standard and those who see value in the state-level experimentation that has produced frameworks like New York's BitLicense and Wyoming's digital asset charter. Recent developments, including State Street's launch of a GENIUS Act-aligned stablecoin reserve fund, suggest the industry is already positioning around the legislation's expected requirements.

What This Means for the Stablecoin Regulatory Outlook

Treasury's final principles will shape how quickly stablecoin issuers can achieve compliance and which jurisdictions remain viable regulatory homes. The senators' intervention adds political pressure to preserve optionality for state-regulated issuers.

The timing is significant. As stablecoin adoption continues to grow, with rising demand for USDT on peer-to-peer platforms underscoring real-world usage, the regulatory framework underpinning these assets carries increasing weight for both issuers and users.

The regulatory clarity question extends beyond stablecoins. Projects across the broader crypto ecosystem, from layer-1 networks scaling throughput to DeFi protocols, are watching how the federal-state jurisdictional line gets drawn as a signal for future rulemaking.

Treasury has not publicly responded to the senators' request. The comment period on the Federal Register notice provides a window for industry participants, state regulators, and other stakeholders to weigh in before final principles are set.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

Bitcoininfonews first published the article titled Senators Urge Treasury to Keep State Stablecoin Oversight.