Republican Senator Ted Cruz has introduced a bill to block the United States Federal Reserve from launching a “direct-to-consumer” central bank digital currency (CBDC).
In a March 21 statement, Cruz said he introduced the bill to prevent the Fed from developing a retail CBDC “which could be used as a financial surveillance tool by the federal government.”
Cruz stated it’s “more important than ever” to ensure U.S. policy on digital currencies protects “financial privacy, maintain’s the dollar’s dominance and cultivates innovation,” and added:
Cruz claimed the federal government has “no authority to unilaterally establish” a CBDC.
“We should be empowering entrepreneurs, enabling innovation, and increasing individual freedom — not stifling it,” he stressed.
The federal government has no authority to unilaterally establish a central bank currency. Read about my new bill in @FoxBusiness: Ted Cruz introduces bill blocking Fed from adopting central bank digital currencyhttps://t.co/LoX3u41nA4
Cruz’s anti-CBDC bill has the backing of Republican Senators Mike Braun of Indiana and Chuck Grassley of Iowa.
In statements, both expressed the belief that a CBDC would be used as a surveillance tool.
If the bill is passed into law, it would ensure that the state isn’t “snooping” on the finances of hardworking Americans, Grassley stated:
The anti-CBDC bill is a second attempt by Cruz, Braun and Grassley, who introduced a similar bill on March 30, 2022 to prohibit the Fed from issuing a CBDC directly to individuals.
However, nearly 12 months later, the bill still hasn’t moved past the introduction phase.
Meanwhile, considerable progress is being made on a U.S. dollar CBDC since President Joe Biden signed an executive order to “Ensuring Responsible
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