Washington: What to Watch Now

Key takeaways

  • Kevin Warsh poised to be confirmed as next Fed chair this week, with the three-step confirmation process set to wrap up in time for him to take the oath of office on May 15.
  • The Senate Banking Committee meets this week to consider the long-delayed CLARITY Act, legislation that would create a regulatory framework for cryptocurrencies.
  • President Donald Trump heads to China for high-stakes meetings with China President Xi Jinping where trade and tariffs are at the top of the agenda.
  • Some lawmakers have been floating the idea of a temporary pause on the $0.18 per gallon federal gas tax as a way to bring gas prices down.
  • Court decisions reshape the midterm battle to control the House of Representatives with the battle likely to be much closer than originally thought.

The Senate began a three-step confirmation process with a procedural vote on May 11 to advance Kevin Warsh's nomination to succeed Jerome Powell as Federal Reserve chair. There will be a second vote, likely May 12 or 13, to confirm Warsh as one of the seven members of the Fed's Board of Governors. And then a third and final vote to confirm him as chair, which should take place no later than May 14. That should ensure that Warsh can take the oath of office by May 15—the last day of Powell's term as chair. But any effort by Warsh to push for quick interest rate cuts is likely to meet fierce resistance from the members of the Fed's rate-setting committee, several of whom signaled at the April meeting that they did not anticipate cutting rates anytime soon.

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Senate committee to consider long-delayed crypto legislation

The Senate Banking Committee is set to meet May 14 to consider the CLARITY Act, a bill to create a regulatory framework for cryptocurrency. Among other things, the bill would clarify when crypto tokens are securities and when they are commodities. It would give primary regulatory authority to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), with a secondary role for the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). A version of the legislation was approved by the House last summer.

The bill also attempts to resolve a months-long dispute between crypto companies and traditional banks over the payment of "rewards" on customer holdings of stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency pegged to the U.S. dollar. Banks have argued that the rewards act like interest on bank deposits but without any of the regulatory structure that banks must comply with. Revisions to the legislation would ban rewards on stablecoin holdings but would permit them on other stablecoin activities, like payments or transfers. Banks continue to object to that and other provisions and have mounted a lobbying campaign in hopes of derailing this week's committee vote.