A US lawmaker is pushing to abolish the Federal Reserve, citing a book that helped shape Bitcoin's monetary philosophy.
US Representative Thomas Massie introduced legislation to dismantle the Federal Reserve system, citing "The Bitcoin Standard" as a key influence on his monetary policy views.
"The Federal Reserve has overseen a 96% decline in the dollar's purchasing power since 1913, and it is time to restore sound money to the American people," Massie, a Republican from Kentucky, said in a statement.
The Federal Reserve Board Abolition Act, first filed in March 2025 as H.R. 1846, would eliminate the Board of Governors and the 12 regional Federal Reserve banks. The bill has drawn renewed attention in crypto circles after Massie explicitly referenced Saifedean Ammous' "The Bitcoin Standard," a book that frames Bitcoin through Austrian economics and hard-money theory.
The legislation has virtually no chance of passing in the near term given the Fed's deep integration into US financial markets, banking supervision and payment systems. Still, the bill's cultural resonance within the Bitcoin community signals how far the critique of central bank money has traveled — from niche forums to the floor of Congress.
Why Bitcoiners are watching
Bitcoin's original design was built around distrust of central bank money. Its fixed supply of 21 million coins, predictable issuance schedule and lack of a central monetary authority made it attractive to those who believed fiat currencies were vulnerable to inflation and political manipulation. "The Bitcoin Standard" became one of the most widely read books in that community, helping transform Bitcoin from a technical experiment into a broader monetary idea.
Massie's explicit reference to that intellectual tradition gives the bill symbolic weight beyond its legislative prospects. It marks one of the first times a sitting US lawmaker has connected anti-Fed politics with a Bitcoin-adjacent monetary critique in an official congressional filing.
What it means for the narrative
The US share of open-source crypto developers has fallen to about 19% from 38% in 2015, according to industry data. While Massie's bill does not directly address developer retention, it reflects a broader shift: Bitcoin's monetary ideas are entering formal political debate. That shift could influence how policymakers approach digital assets in future regulatory frameworks.
For now, the bill remains a long shot. The Fed manages trillions of dollars in assets, sets the federal funds rate that anchors global financial markets, and supervises thousands of banks. Dismantling it would require an act of Congress that would face enormous institutional resistance. But as a signal of Bitcoin's growing political legitimacy, the legislation carries weight beyond its odds of passage.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.