Parliament records for the longest vote on the ruling of encryption bills
The House of Representatives set a new record for the longest vote in the history of the Chamber on Wednesday night, exceeding seven hours and 24 minutes to vote for triple progress from the cryptocurrency bills, where the Republican leaders worked behind the scenes to obtain a handful of the Republican Party’s acceptance on board.
The room officially broke the record at 8:43 pm as a vote on a base – which governs the discussion on legislation – remained open. The previous record was registered almost two weeks ago, when a vote on the base of the “Grand and Beautiful Law” of the Republican Party stopped for more than seven hours.
As of 9:30 pm, voting on the base of encrypted currency laws remained open at the 208-221 outcome, less than the majority of the majority needed for adoption. Ten Republicans were registered as “no” votes.
The room remained on a dead end on Wednesday, where the spokesperson Mike Johnson (R-La) attempted to identify the various factions at its conference to adopt a control base for a discussion on the three encryption bills, as well as a procedure for financing the Pentagon in the new fiscal year. The floor froze on Tuesday after 12 Republicans of Republicans in the House of Representatives, who detonated a base.
After two militant Republicans, actors. Cheib Roy (Texas) and Margori Taylor Green (Georgia), and Vice President of Financial Services in House of Representatives, Bill Huezga. All “no” sounds, Johnson rushed to save the base. Huzena eventually turned his vote to support, but the opponents of the solid line grew all day.
The vote remained open for hours, where the speaker met with members of the House of Representatives, freedom, the Financial Services Committee in the House of Representatives, and the Agriculture Committee in the House of Representatives, in an attempt to reconcile their differences on encrypted bills.
The main disagreement point for Republicans in the hardline line is the absence of a ruling in the genius law that would prevent the creation of a central bank of the Central Bank (CBDC).
The Genius Law, one of the three bills to consider it by the House of Representatives, is ready to become a law because it goes on to President Trump’s office.
While the second encryption bill, a CBDC, will prevent the federal reserve from the CBDC version, it faces an inaccurate path forward in the Senate.
After 12 Republicans of Republicans voted on a preliminary procedural vote on Tuesday, Trump concluded a deal with legislators, as CBDC control provisions will be added to a third encoding bill-the clarity of the digital asset market.
It is worth noting that the market structure bill also faces a complex future, as the Senate is preparing to present its own version of the legislation.
However, this step appears to have thwarted members of the House of Representatives, which created a dilemma.