As expected, lawmakers in North Carolina have pushed through a bill that will ban the state from dealing in central bank digital currency (CBDC), in defiance of a gubernatorial veto.
Last week, the North Carolina Senate聽 to override the veto of Democrat Governor Roy Cooper in a 27-17 vote.
The move follows an earlier vote in the House of Representatives at the end of July, when lawmakers voted 73-41 to override Cooper鈥檚 veto.
The end result is that House Bill (HB) 690, also known as the聽 bill, will now become law.
As 91天堂原創聽heard from lawmakers in July, the governor鈥檚 veto is null and void if a bill receives two-thirds majority support in both the House and the Senate subsequent to the veto.
颁辞辞辫别谤听 the bill on the grounds that it was 鈥減remature, vague and reactionary鈥, and that it proposes an end result to 鈥渋mportant monetary decisions鈥 that have not yet been made.
鈥淓fforts are being made at the federal level to ensure standards and safeguards are in place to protect consumers, investors and businesses that may want to make monetary transactions in digital assets,鈥 he said.
鈥淣orth Carolina should wait to see how they work before taking action. Instead of this bill, the legislature should have passed a budget to provide more funding for cybersecurity threats that actually exist now.鈥
Representative Harry Warren (R) was one of two primary sponsors of the bill and one of nine Republican lawmakers who sponsored the bill.
Speaking with 91天堂原創, he said the bill is 鈥減roactive and preventative: not premature鈥.聽
鈥淭he language is concise and clear; there is nothing vague about it,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t is, however, in reaction to the federal government and global interest in the concept of central bank digital currency.鈥
Warren said he also sponsored the bill to protect the privacy of individuals and to uphold their right to transact in their own digital assets.
What鈥檚 in the bill?
HB 690 prohibits all North Carolina state agencies from accepting payments using CBDC, or from participating in any test of CBDC by any Federal Reserve branch.
The bill defines CBDC as any digital currency, digital medium of exchange or digital monetary unit of account issued by the Federal Reserve System or other federal agency that is made available directly to consumers.
The term also includes any digital currency, digital medium of exchange or digital monetary unit of account that is processed or validated directly by the Federal Reserve System or other federal agencies.
CBDC resistance in other US states
With the passage of HB 690, North Carolina becomes the sixth US state to enact legislation banning the use of CBDC, following in the footsteps of聽Louisiana, Florida, Alabama, Indiana and South Dakota.
Other US states currently considering legislation to ban or limit the use of CBDC include Hawaii, Nebraska, Utah, Wisconsin, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Missouri and New Hampshire.