Texas Closes Legislative Session Without Penning Crypto Policy

The mining bill that flew through the Texas state senate might be on pause until 2025

article-image

lev radin/Shutterstock modified by Blockworks

share

Texas closed its regular legislative session Monday, leaving crypto bills in limbo for potentially 19 months. 

Texas is one of four states on a biennial legislature schedule, meaning state lawmakers only meet for regular sessions every other year. The next regular session is scheduled for Jan. 14, 2025. 

A Texas Senate bill aimed to nix tax breaks for miners and crack down on energy usage is one of the legislative matters left unresolved. The Senate passed the bill unanimously in early April before it was referred to committee in the House. The House did not vote on it before closing the session. 

The Senate Bill, number 1751, was sponsored by three Republican state senators and drew criticism from crypto advocates in the area

Kristine Cranley, director of business development at Texas Blockchain Council, said in an April 1 tweet the bill placed an “arbitrary cap” on miners, causing the cost of grid stabilizing services to increase. 

A second crypto bill made it further in the legislative process, but still has yet to become law. House Bill 1666, which would require exchanges to hold reserves high enough to at least cover any obligations to customers, passed the House in April and the Senate in May. 

It was sent to Governor Greg Abbott on May 22. Abbott has 20 days to sign or veto, if no action is taken the bill becomes law without a signature. 

Crypto-related policies are not the only bills lawmakers failed to finalize before Monday’s deadline. High-profile proposals to use a budget surplus to fund property tax cuts and ramp up border security also did not make it over the finish line. 

Governor Abbott has the power to reconvene lawmakers for a Special Session, which he did late Monday evening to focus on property tax and border security policy. 

“Many critical items remain that must be passed,” Abbott said in a statement Monday. 

Abbott did not mention any crypto policy in his Monday statement opening the Special Session, although further gatherings could be called before January 2025. 
After the close of the regular session in 2021, Abbott called for three special sessions, each lasting around 30 days, which is the max for special sessions, and intended to address between 10 and 20 topics.


Get the news in your inbox. Explore Blockworks newsletters:

  • Blockworks Daily: The newsletter that helps thousands of investors understand crypto and the markets, by Byron Gilliam.
  • Empire: Start your morning with the top news and analysis to inform your day in crypto.
  • Forward Guidance: Reporting and analysis on the growing intersection of crypto and macroeconomics, policy and finance.
  • 0xResearch: Alpha directly in your inbox. Market highlights, data, degen trade ideas, governance updates, token performance and more.
  • Lightspeed: Built for Solana investors, developers and community members. The latest from one of crypto’s hottest networks.
  • The Drop: For crypto collectors and traders, covering apps, games, memes and more.
  • Supply Shock: Tracking Bitcoin’s rise from internet plaything worth less than a penny to global phenomenon disrupting money as we know it.
Tags

Upcoming Events

Industry City | Brooklyn, NY

TUES - THURS, JUNE 24 - 26, 2025

Permissionless IV serves as the definitive gathering for crypto’s technical founders, developers, and builders to come together and create the future.If you’re ready to shape the future of crypto, Permissionless IV is where it happens.

Old Billingsgate

Mon - Wed, October 13 - 15, 2025

Blockworks’ Digital Asset Summit (DAS) will feature conversations between the builders, allocators, and legislators who will shape the trajectory of the digital asset ecosystem in the US and abroad.

recent research

Research

article-image

According to a legal filing, Galaxy Digital helped boost the price of LUNA while quietly selling its tokens

article-image

Tech fund portfolio manager Dominic Rizzo calls stablecoins “the most obvious use case for crypto”

article-image

Institutional players are energized by huge market shifts, “the scale of which you haven’t even imagined”

article-image

A memecoin short squeeze pushed Hyperliquid to the brink — and revealed decentralization limits

article-image

Tools for Humanity’s Developer Reward pilot program kicks off on April 1

article-image

Blockworks Research analyst Boccaccio explains the HyperLiquid controversy and why they need to adjust risk and margin