Editor's note: Morning Money is a free version of POLITICO Pro Financial Services morning newsletter, which is delivered to our subscribers each morning at 5:15 a.m. The POLITICO Pro platform combines the news you need with tools you can use to take action on the day's biggest stories. Act on the news with POLITICO Pro. The crypto industry can prod Washington regulators for tailored rules and regulations all it wants. It won't be on terra firma until there's a digital asset law on the books. That's the lesson crypto and Web3 lobbyists should be taking from a Supreme Court ruling that stripped the Environmental Protection Agency's ability to regulate greenhouse gas-spewing power plants under the 52-year-old Clean Air Act, says Tomicah Tillemann, a former State Department official who's the chief policy officer at Haun Ventures. The June 30 decision has been interpreted as a rebuke to federal agencies that have developed new rules for industry without getting an explicit green light from Congress. With the SEC seeking to regulate the crypto exchanges and Web3 startups through wide-reaching securities laws, Tillemann — whose firm is a major investor in digital asset businesses — is contending that the crypto lobby needs to direct its efforts toward securing the passage of digital asset legislation. "Successful statutes from the past are not the only roadmap for the future, particularly when it comes to web3, nor is piecemeal rulemaking and enforcement the path to mission-critical policy for the next generation of the internet," he wrote in a think piece with Haun's General Counsel James Rathmell and attorney JP Schnapper-Casteras. "Ultimately, we'll need new rules to help govern these new tools." It's the latest example of how crypto's Washington endeavors are evolving in pursuit of a new rulebook that's less rigid than existing frameworks for traditional securities like stocks and bonds. Given Haun's growing footprint — the firm launched a $1.5 billion debut fund to invest in new digital asset businesses earlier in the year — it's also an indication of how crypto-native financiers plan to influence policymakers in the coming months. "It is still the case, obviously, that there is room for narrower rulemaking on the part of the administrative agencies," Tillemann said in an interview. "But it's undeniably true that in the current legal environment, legislation is going to carry substantially more weight and have substantially more impact than anything that the agencies are going to be able to do on their own." The digital asset lobby has started to notch some successes on the Hill, even as the industry withstands a barrage of scandals following a market crash that obliterated several high-flying lending startups and left millions of retail customers in the lurch. New legislation from Senate Agriculture Chair Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) and Sen. John Boozman (R-Ark.), which would give the Commodity Futures Trading Commission direct authority over popular exchanges where Bitcoin and Ether are traded, is the clearest and most recent indication that industry associations and top crypto trading platforms are getting their message across to lawmakers. With the SEC trying to corral digital asset exchanges into registering as national securities exchanges — a classification that would subject those platforms to hard rules that affect everything from investor protections to their operation of internal trading desks — industry leaders have pushed for new laws that would put them in the much-smaller CFTC's remit. Lawmakers are taking note that they're more or less united on this front. "Almost all [of industry] feel like the regulator should be the CFTC," Boozman told reporters in a virtual press briefing earlier this month. "The fact they're fairly united on that makes it easier on members." IT'S MONDAY — And Kate is back in the saddle. Have a tip, story idea or other feedback for any of us? Hit us up at kdavidson@politico.com, ssutton@politico.com or aweaver@politico.com.
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