Economy 11-07-2026 14:23 4 Views

Trump Refuses to Sign Bipartisan Housing Bill Carrying…

Why Is a Digital Dollar Ban Inside a Housing Bill?

A bipartisan housing bill that includes a temporary ban on a U.S. central bank digital currency is set to become law without President Donald Trump’s signature, placing digital dollar policy inside one of the year’s most unusual legislative outcomes. The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act passed the House and Senate in June with broad support from both parties. Its core purpose is housing policy, but the final legislation also includes language barring the Federal Reserve from issuing or creating a central bank digital currency, or any digital asset that is substantially similar, until Dec. 31, 2030. The CBDC provision was widely viewed as a political concession to secure Republican backing. Opposition to a digital dollar has become a defining issue for many Republicans, who argue that a Federal Reserve-issued digital currency could create financial privacy and surveillance risks. The housing bill now turns that position into statutory policy for the rest of the decade. Trump did not focus on the CBDC language when explaining why he would not sign the bill. Instead, he criticized Republicans in Congress who backed the housing legislation and urged the Senate to prioritize the SAVE America Act, a voting bill that would require people to provide proof of U.S. citizenship in person to register.

How Can the Bill Become Law Without Trump’s Signature?

Under the U.S. Constitution, a bill can become law without a president’s signature if it remains on the president’s desk for 10 days, excluding Sundays, and Congress is still in session. That deadline is now set to expire, meaning the housing bill can take effect without a veto or formal approval from Trump. Trump canceled a planned signing ceremony for the legislation on June 24 and later confirmed that he would not sign it. The move allows him to distance himself politically from the bill while avoiding a veto of legislation that passed with strong bipartisan margins. Senator Elizabeth Warren, who co-sponsored the bill, criticized Trump’s refusal to sign it but noted that the outcome would not stop the legislation from becoming law. “[H]e’s refusing to sign the biggest housing bill in 30 years,” she said. “The good news: it’s going to become law anyway.” For crypto policy, the mechanism matters. The CBDC ban is not moving as a standalone digital asset bill. It is becoming law through a broader housing package, showing how crypto-related provisions can advance through unrelated legislation when they carry enough political value.

Investor Takeaway

The CBDC ban reduces near-term uncertainty around a Federal Reserve-issued digital dollar, but it does not resolve broader U.S. digital asset policy. Private stablecoins, crypto exchanges, tokenized deposits, and market structure rules remain separate regulatory tracks.

What Does the CBDC Ban Mean for Crypto Markets?

The ban is mainly important because it narrows the range of official digital money options in the United States. Until the end of 2030, the Federal Reserve would be blocked from issuing or creating a CBDC or a substantially similar digital asset. That gives private-sector dollar instruments more room to develop. Stablecoin issuers, payment firms, banks, and tokenization platforms have long watched the CBDC debate because a digital dollar could compete with private dollar tokens or change how settlement infrastructure is designed. A statutory pause reduces that risk for several years. The effect is not the same as a complete digital asset framework. The ban does not set rules for stablecoin reserves, exchange registration, custody, token classification, or decentralized finance. It simply blocks the central bank from moving forward with a specific category of official digital currency. For investors, that distinction is important. The CBDC ban may support the long-term role of private stablecoins in U.S. dollar settlement, especially if banks and crypto firms continue building payment and tokenization products. But the larger question remains whether Congress can pass market structure rules that define how digital assets are supervised.

Could This Affect the CLARITY Act?

Trump’s refusal to sign the housing bill has raised questions about whether other crypto-related legislation could face similar political handling. The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act has already passed the House and two key Senate committees, with Republican leaders expecting a full Senate vote after lawmakers return from state work periods. The CLARITY Act is more central to the crypto industry than the CBDC provision. It is designed to define how digital assets are regulated and how authority is divided between federal agencies. Its passage would matter directly for exchanges, token issuers, brokers, custodians, and institutional investors seeking clearer U.S. rules. The political backdrop is complicated. Trump has said he wants to “future-proof” digital asset regulations, but his personal and family-linked crypto ventures have already made market structure talks more difficult between Democrats and Republicans. The president disclosed more than $1.4 billion in income from crypto ventures in 2025, including memecoins and the family’s World Liberty Financial platform. That creates a narrow path for crypto legislation. Republicans want to move quickly on market structure, while Democrats are likely to press conflict-of-interest questions and seek stronger investor protection language. The housing bill shows that crypto provisions can pass through bipartisan packages, but it also shows how easily unrelated political fights can shape the final stage of legislation. For now, the immediate result is clear: the United States is on track to block a Federal Reserve digital dollar through 2030, while the broader digital asset rulebook remains unfinished. The CBDC debate may be settled temporarily, but the market structure debate is still moving through Congress.

Other news