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Sir Keir Starmer has attacked the budget as “the last desperate act of a party that has failed” as he branded Jeremy Hunt and Rishi Sunak “the Chuckle Brothers of decline”.

The Labour leader criticised the chancellor for presiding over a recession and the highest tax burden in 70 years – and accused Mr Hunt of using the budget to “give with one hand and take even more with the other”.

The chancellor announced a 2p cut to national insurance and abolished the current tax system for non-doms, which has been a Labour policy for some time.

Sir Keir called the move, which is expected to raise £2.7bn a year, a “short-term, cynical political gimmick” – adding there was not a “more obvious example of a government that is totally bereft of ideas”.

The Labour leader said Mr Hunt was a chancellor who “breezes into this chamber in a recession and tells the working people of this country that everything’s on track”.

Budget live: No rabbit out of the hat on income tax from chancellor

“Crisis? What crisis? Or as the captain of the Titanic and the former prime minister herself might have said, iceberg? What iceberg?” he joked.

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“Smiling as the ship goes down, the Chuckle Brothers of decline, dreaming of Santa Monica or maybe just a quiet life in Surrey not having to self-fund his election.”

Sir Keir said Britain deserved better than a “Rishi recession” and claimed the Tories had “maxed out the nation’s credit card”.

And calling for the government to confirm a May general election, he added: “It’s time to break the habit of 14 years – stop the dithering.”

Mr Hunt unveiled his budget – expected to be the last before the general election later this year – after speculation in the media pointed towards a possible cut in income tax to woo voters.

But the chancellor resisted calls from Tory MPs for income tax to be cut and instead stuck to reducing national insurance further from 10% to 8%.

Mr Hunt said that, combined with the reduction in national insurance in the autumn statement last year, the average worker would be £900 better off.

In his statement responding to the budget, Sir Keir said his party would support the cuts to national insurance because it had “campaigned to lower the tax burden on working people for the whole parliament”.

But he accused Mr Sunak of breaking a promise he made when he was chancellor that the basic rate of income tax would be cut from 20 to 19p in 2024.

Elsewhere in his budget, the chancellor earmarked almost £6bn for the NHS with artificial intelligence set to be used to “cut form-filling for doctors” in a digitisation drive – although Labour pointed out that Mr Hunt promised to make the NHS paperless by 2018 when he was health secretary.

Other headline measures include extending the 5p cut to fuel duty for another 12 months and maintaining the price of beer, wine and spirits until February 2025.

The High Income Child Benefit Charge threshold will also increase from £50,000 to £60,000 while the higher capital gains tax rate on property will fall from 28% to 24%.

There were signs of some discontent on the Tory benches after the Scottish Conservatives said the extension of the windfall tax on oil and gas was “deeply disappointing”.

Andrew Bowie, a minister in the Department for Energy and Net Zero, said he would work with Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross in response to the extension of the energy profits levy, which charges oil and gas companies an extra 35% tax on the money they make in the UK.

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Legacy forex, payments platforms ‘hate’ stablecoin adoption — Kevin O’Leary

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Legacy forex, payments platforms ‘hate’ stablecoin adoption — Kevin O’Leary

Legacy forex, payments platforms ‘hate’ stablecoin adoption — Kevin O’Leary

Global foreign exchange and payments platforms are lobbying hard against stablecoins, which stand to significantly disrupt their business models, investor Kevin O’Leary said during a keynote address at Consensus 2025.

Legacy forex and payments platforms often extract large fees for servicing cross-border cash transfers and stand to lose out on revenue if regulated stablecoins become accepted as a cheaper, faster alternative, O’Leary said at the Toronto conference. 

“Currency trading is a multi-trillion dollar market — and it’s old and ugly and inefficient,” O’Leary said, adding that “[ t]he biggest threat to that monopoly or oligopoly is a regulated stablecoin.” 

“Once that’s approved, the multi-trillion dollar FX market becomes efficient, transparent, and inexpensive,” he said. 

Legacy forex, payments platforms ‘hate’ stablecoin adoption — Kevin O’Leary
Kevin O’Leary speaking at Consensus. Source: Cointelegraph

Stablecoin legislation

US lawmakers are working on legislation that stands to accelerate global stablecoin adoption, O’Leary added. 

US Senators are aiming to pass the so-called Genius Act — a framework for regulating stablecoins — before the end of May. “As soon as the SEC approves the stablecoin act, every regulator in the US’s circle — Abu Dhabi, Switzerland, England — will follow,” O’Leary said.

“Who’s worried about this? The financial services industry. They hate this idea, and they’re working very hard to stop that bill from happening right now,” he added.

O’Leary said regulatory clarity for stablecoins may be a precursor to broader cryptocurrency reform that could potentially unlock trillions of dollars in institutional capital.

“When this language comes out, people will see really good refinement, a lot of progress, on things like consumer protection, bankruptcy protection, and ethics,” US Senator Kirsten Gillibrand said during an event hosted by Coinbase’s lobbying arm, Stand with Crypto.

As of May 15, stablecoins are collectively worth nearly $250 billion in market capitalization, according to data from CoinGecko. Tether’s US-dollar pegged stablecoin USDT is the leader, with a market cap of around $150 million, the data showed. It’s followed by Circle’s USDC, another US-dollar pegged stablecoin with a market cap of more than $60 billion.

Magazine: Bitcoin to $1M ‘by 2029,’ CIA tips its hat to Bitcoin: Hodler’s Digest, April 27 – May 3

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Trump’s crypto ties ‘add a certain level of challenge’ to passing bills — Coinbase exec

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Trump’s crypto ties ‘add a certain level of challenge’ to passing bills — Coinbase exec

Trump’s crypto ties ‘add a certain level of challenge’ to passing bills — Coinbase exec

Coinbase chief legal officer Paul Grewal addressed some of the concerns raised by US lawmakers and industry leaders around President Donald Trump’s crypto ventures, and how they may affect related legislation.

Speaking at the Consensus conference in Toronto on May 15, Grewal said there had been “hiccups” in Congress since the Senate Banking Committee voted to advance the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for US Stablecoins, or GENIUS Act, in March. Though Grewal said there were disputes over “substantial issues that need to be addressed” in the bill, he hinted that Trump’s involvement in the industry was a “complicating factor.” 

“The discussion around the president’s support for a certain memecoin or two and other efforts does add a certain level of challenge to the effort to get Democrats and Republicans aligned on the right way to regulate the [spot market], but I have confidence that the Senate and the House are going to sort all that out,” said Grewal.

Coinbase, Law, Politics, Donald Trump, Stablecoin
Paul Grewal (right) on stage at Consensus in Toronto on May 15. Source: Cointelegraph.

Democrats including Senator Elizabeth Warren explicitly called out the Trump family’s crypto venture, World Liberty Financial, and its USD1 stablecoin in opposing the GENIUS Act. However, some of the bill’s supporters, like Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, who proposed an earlier version of the legislation, said they would remove language specifically targeting the president’s crypto ventures.

Related: Democrats seek suspicious activity reports linked to Trump crypto ventures

Whatever the terms for modifications to the bill may be, many lawmakers still expect the Senate to take up another vote in a matter of days. Punchbowl reported on May 15 that Democrats “won major victories” after receiving assurances that some of their concerns around consumer protection, Anti-Money Laundering, and national security safeguards would be addressed.

First stablecoins, then a market structure bill?

The House of Representatives is also considering draft legislation for a digital asset market structure bill, a different iteration of the FIT21 bill that passed the chamber in May 2024. Democratic representatives have similarly pushed back on the legislation, citing “Trump’s crypto corruption.”

“I think we’re gonna learn a lot from the progress we see just in the next few days on stablecoins on the appetite to really tackle all these problems on any schedule that resembles the one that was laid out not long ago by the White House and certain leaders in Congress,” said Grewal.

Magazine: Trump’s crypto ventures raise conflict of interest, insider trading questions

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Stablecoin regulation ‘next catalyst’ for crypto industry — Aptos head

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<div>Stablecoin regulation 'next catalyst' for crypto industry — Aptos head</div>

<div>Stablecoin regulation 'next catalyst' for crypto industry — Aptos head</div>

Stablecoin regulation is “the next catalyst” for the crypto industry and could lead to unprecedented “appetite from institutional investors,” according to Ash Pampati, head of ecosystem at the Aptos Foundation.

In an interview with Cointelegraph at Consensus 2025 in Toronto, Pampati said that “the whole world outside of the United States […] has already jumped onto this [stablecoins],” adding that “the US is […] at the doorstep.”

“I really think about new use cases that can emerge because of the borderless nature of stablecoins, because of the efficiency of the dollar onchain,” he said. “If you’re trying to send money to your friend in Nigeria, why do you have to go through a bunch of hoops?”

Stablecoins are often used to transfer money across borders, as they are easier and cheaper to transfer than traditional finance methods such as wire transfers. They are also used to hedge against fiat currency, which, in emerging markets, can devalue significantly in a short period of time.

Related: Pareto launches synthetic dollar backed by private credit

According to a new survey from Fireblocks, Latin America leads all regions in real-world use of stablecoins, with 71% of respondents saying they use the technology for cross-border payments. Half of respondents in the region, which encompasses a number of developing countries, say they expect stablecoins to offer lower transaction costs than traditional finance rails.

“I think you will see an amazing appetite from institutional investors […] we can really think, rethink the fintech space across B2B, B2C with fully onchain rails,” Pampati said.

86% of firms ready for stablecoins

According to Fireblocks’ survey, 86% of respondents say that their company shows “infrastructure readiness.” In other words, their companies are ready to adopt stablecoin. In addition, 75% of respondents say they see clear customer demand for stablecoins.

Interview, Stablecoin, Aptos
Confidence indicators for stablecoin adoption. Source: Fireblocks

However, regulation still holds a large role in determining adoption. The survey shows that confidence in stablecoins is rising, not only because of the technology but also because regulatory barriers have fallen.

Agencies around the world have sought to regulate stablecoins. The progress has included the European Union’s MiCA regulation, various acts in the United Arab Emirates, and even the United States’ GENIUS Act, which reports indicate has regained some bipartisan support after a failed May 8 vote.

Magazine: Legal Panel: Crypto wanted to overthrow banks, now it’s becoming them in stablecoin fight

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