Sources disclose that U.S. Representative Byron Donalds (R-FL) plans to introduce legislation on March 14, 2025, to permanently establish President Donald Trump’s Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and Digital Asset Stockpile, aiming to shield the initiative from reversal by future administrations.
US Lawmaker Plans to Introduce Bill to Permanently ‘Cement’ Trump’s National Bitcoin Reserve
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U.S. Could Anchor Crypto Leadership as Donalds Seeks to Codify Bitcoin Reserve
The bill seeks to codify a March 6 executive order signed by President Trump, the 47th U.S. president, which created a government-held reserve of nearly 200,000 bitcoin (BTC) — valued at $16.8 billion — sourced from criminal and civil asset forfeitures. The reserve, likened by officials to a “digital Fort Knox,” would treat bitcoin as a strategic reserve asset akin to gold, with no plans to sell holdings.
A separate stockpile would hold other seized cryptocurrencies, including ethereum. Reports reveal Rep. Donalds’ bill would make the reserve and stockpile fixtures of U.S. policy, demanding Congress—not the White House—okay any changes. The GOP lawmaker told Bloomberg the plan seeks to “cement [Trump’s] vision” as both parties eye ways to steady crypto’s economic clout.
The push amplifies Trump’s 2024 vow to turn America into the “ crypto capital” of the world. Post-victory, his team threw a glitzy crypto summit at the White House and branded digital coins as economic shock absorbers. The Treasury, which oversees the reserve, spilled the tea: Its stash includes bitcoin nabbed from headline-grabbing cases like the 2016 Bitfinex heist and Silk Road probe.
Though the bill has drawn cheers from crypto moguls and a few politicians, doubters blast bitcoin’s wild swings as a shaky choice for national reserves. Cornell economist Eswar Prasad, for one, claimed in 2023 that bitcoin’s “rollercoaster vibes” clash with steady assets like gold. Moreover, markets did a tango recently: Bitcoin shed 5% post-Trump’s order (thanks to zero new buy plans), then skidded to $76,600 last week after his tariff talk.
Fireworks erupted online over adding non- bitcoin tokens to the stockpile, splitting Trump’s crypto fanbase. Before things were finalized, crypto supporters like the Winklevoss twins criticized the inclusion of non- bitcoin assets. Meanwhile, Treasury and Commerce won approval to brainstorm wallet-friendly ways to grab more bitcoin—no taxpayer cash allowed—and Trump’s Crypto Czar swore off non- BTC buys.
Next up? The Senate’s hot seat, where the bill’s survival may swing on money-smarts debates and crypto’s future in national playbooks. As lawmakers gear up, the drama signals a spicy—if messy—fling between D.C. and the crypto world, potentially rewriting finance’s future.














