Senator Cynthia Lummis criticized the U.S. government for continuing to liquidate Bitcoin holdings, despite what she says was an explicit directive from Donald Trump to preserve these assets for a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve.
“Why is the U.S. government still liquidating bitcoin when President Trump explicitly directed these assets be preserved for our Strategic Bitcoin Reserve?
We can’t afford to squander these strategic assets while other nations are accumulating bitcoin.”
Lummis’s comments center on three core points:
Her framing positions Bitcoin alongside gold and foreign currency reserves.
If the U.S. continues liquidating seized or held Bitcoin:
Once sold, these coins cannot be reacquired without market impact.
The issue highlights a growing divide:
Lummis and other pro‑Bitcoin lawmakers argue the latter requires a structural policy change, not ad‑hoc sales.
In that context, selling BTC may be seen as short‑term thinking.
Senator Lummis’s remarks sharpen the debate over whether Bitcoin is merely a seized asset—or a strategic reserve commodity. If the U.S. intends to compete in a world where nations accumulate digital assets, she argues, continued liquidation risks squandering an advantage that cannot be easily rebuilt.

