The lobbying organization for the U.S. banking industry — the American Bankers Association — was asked to help with the anti-crypto legislation, according to recent Senator comments.
Big banks have been helping United States Senators Roger Marshall and Elizabeth Warren draft their controversial anti-crypto bill.
A Dec. 20 video that surfaced on X (formerly Twitter), shows footage of Senator Marshall admitting that he and Senator Warren approached the largest lobbying organization for the U.S. banking industry — the American Bankers Association (ABA) — for assistance in crafting the Digital Asset Anti-Money Laundering Act.
The Digital Asset Anti-Money Laundering Act, first introduced in December 2022, aims to bring crypto technology such as non-custodial wallets, validators, and mining pools under the strict banking regulations in the United States.
“The first thing that we did is that we went to the American Bankers Association and said 'help us craft this'.”
Marshall also mentioned Warren’s meeting with JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon in which they both agreed that “crypto was only a tool for criminals.” The footage was sourced from a parliamentary security-intelligence forum earlier this month.
In response to the video, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong expressed his disappointment that Senators Warren and Marshall were now lobbying for banks. “Being anti-crypto is a really bad political strategy going into 2024,” he added.
Meanwhile, finance lawyer Scott Johnsson suggested that voters angry at Senator Warren should focus on vulnerable seats that have supported her crusade this past year.
On Dec. 11. the bill gained five new Senators as co-sponsors, including three members of the Banking Committee. Moreover, U.S. banking advocacy group, the Bank Policy Institute (BPI), has also backed anti-crypto legislation introduced by Senator Warren.
Anti-crypto commentators often make the claim that digital assets are used largely for nefarious activity, despite a wealth of evidence to the contrary. Blockchain analysis platform Chainalysis showed that less than 0.2% of crypto is used for illicit purposes.
Anti-crypto advocates also often fail to acknowledge the level of criminal activity in the world of traditional finance, with JPMorgan being one of the most heavily fined banks. The Wall Street bank has paid almost $40 billion in fines for a wide range of violations since 2000, according to Violation Tracker.