Trump adviser Patrick Witt backs sweeping crypto tax bills

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Trump adviser Patrick Witt has backed six House crypto tax bills as lawmakers seek to clarify rules for staking, mining, and digital asset transactions.

Summary

  • Patrick Witt backed six House crypto tax bills covering staking, mining, crypto payments, and tax reporting rules.
  • Lawmakers split the proposals into separate bills, allowing individual measures to advance independently.
  • Witt’s support comes as Congress also debates the CLARITY Act ahead of a potential Senate vote before August.

According to statements posted on X, White House crypto adviser Patrick Witt praised the House Ways and Means Committee’s latest tax proposals, writing:

“Clarity for market structure, Parity for tax. Great work, Ways and Means Committee.”

The endorsement arrived ahead of a June 9 committee hearing examining six separate crypto tax measures. Rather than combining the proposals into a single bill, lawmakers chose to advance them individually, a structure that could allow some provisions to move forward even if others face opposition.

Among the measures under review are the Less Tax Paperwork for Digital Asset Owners Act, the Charitable Deductions for Digital Asset Donations Act, the Tax Clarity for Mining and Staking Act, the Providing Analogous Rules for Digital Assets Act, the Digital Assets Voluntary Disclosure Program Act, and the Applying Existing Tax Anti-Abuse Rules to the Digital Assets Act.

Proposals focus on unresolved crypto tax issues

Committee documents show that the legislation targets several areas that have remained unclear under existing tax guidance.

Particular attention has centered on the Tax Clarity for Mining and Staking Act, which would establish when staking and mining rewards become taxable. The issue has been debated across the crypto industry because investors can sometimes face tax obligations on tokens whose value later falls sharply during market downturns.

Another proposal attracting interest is the Less Tax Paperwork for Digital Asset Owners Act. Under current Internal Revenue Service rules, even small crypto transactions can create taxable capital gains events that require recordkeeping and reporting.

If approved, the measure would create a de minimis exemption for certain low-value transactions, reducing reporting requirements for everyday crypto payments.

Additional bills would clarify tax treatment for digital asset donations, apply anti-abuse provisions to cryptocurrencies, and establish a voluntary disclosure program for taxpayers seeking to correct previous crypto-related filings.

Scheduled witnesses at the June 9 hearing include representatives from Coinbase, Fidelity Investments, Coin Center, the Crypto Council, and The Digital Chamber, according to committee information.

Support extends beyond tax legislation

Witt’s support for the tax package follows his recent defense of the CLARITY Act, another major digital asset proposal currently moving through Congress.

During a Blockchain Association town hall reported by crypto.news last week, Witt argued that the CLARITY Act would strengthen regulatory oversight while remaining compatible with law enforcement objectives.

His comments came as critics questioned whether portions of the bill could complicate efforts to combat illicit finance, while supporters maintained the legislation would place more crypto activity under federal supervision.

Elsewhere on Capitol Hill, Senator Cynthia Lummis has urged lawmakers to move quickly on digital asset legislation. According to recent market updates, Lummis warned that Congress may not have another meaningful opportunity to pass comprehensive crypto rules until 2030 if current efforts fail.

The senator has also indicated that a Senate vote on the CLARITY Act is now more likely before the August recess than before July 4. The bill previously cleared the Senate Banking Committee in a 15-9 vote and has since been placed on the Senate Legislative Calendar while negotiators continue discussing revisions.

With tax legislation advancing in the House and market-structure legislation progressing in the Senate, lawmakers are simultaneously weighing two of the most significant crypto policy initiatives currently under consideration in Washington.

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