The US Senate voted 84 to 6 on a procedural motion to advance the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, a bipartisan housing affordability package that includes a two-page provision banning the Federal Reserve from issuing a CBDC through December 31, 2030.
The pairing is unusual. A 303-page housing affordability package is not where most observers would expect to find a landmark digital currency provision. But the 84 to 6 cloture vote suggests the combination is working politically: attach a CBDC ban with broad bipartisan appeal to a housing bill that both parties want to pass, and the provision moves forward.
The prohibition bars the Federal Reserve Board and any Federal Reserve bank from issuing a CBDC, either directly or through intermediaries such as private banks. That last clause matters. A ban only on direct issuance could be routed around through commercial banks. The language closes that path explicitly.
The ban expires December 31, 2030 unless Congress renews it. That sunset clause is not a minor detail. The ECB is advancing its digital euro. China’s digital yuan is already in limited circulation. A US ban running to 2030 creates a specific window where the Fed cannot respond in kind regardless of what competitors are doing.
Private, dollar-denominated stablecoins are explicitly exempted, provided they are open, permissionless, and maintain physical cash-like privacy protections. That carve-out is not accidental. Private stablecoin issuers support CBDC bans precisely because a government-issued digital dollar would compete directly with their products.
The privacy requirement is the more interesting element. Current major stablecoins like USDC don’t fully meet that standard. USDC transactions are traceable on-chain and Circle can freeze addresses. Whether the bill creates an enforceable standard or a statement of principle depends on regulatory interpretation.
The Tether USAT launch and the Qivalis euro stablecoin consortium covered this week are both being built on the assumption that private stablecoins will be permitted to operate. The ROAD Act provides explicit US legislative backing for that assumption through 2030.
The primary purpose is housing affordability. Tim Scott and Elizabeth Warren, an unusual pairing, led the legislation. The package streamlines NEPA reviews to speed construction, restricts large corporate landlords from dominating the single-family market, and modernizes manufactured housing rules.
The 84 to 6 vote reflects how the housing crisis crosses partisan lines. Attaching a broadly supported CBDC ban to legislation both parties need is the legislative packaging that produces margins like that.
A CBDC ban through 2030 with a stablecoin carve-out sends a clear signal. The Federal Reserve does not get to build a digital dollar. Private issuers do. That makes the CLARITY Act and GENIUS Act frameworks the primary architecture for US digital currency rather than a Fed-issued alternative.
The Trump administration praised the CBDC prohibition as protecting personal privacy and liberty. Both the consumer protection framing and the competitive carve-out for private industry can be simultaneously true.
The post The US Senate Voted to Advance a Bill That Bans a Digital Dollar Until 2030 appeared first on ETHNews.


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