Rep. David Schweikert, a Republican congressperson from Arizona, has referred a new bill to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce that, if passed, would recognize digital signatures on the blockchain as enforceable by law.
This is particularly important for the enforceability of smart contracts, which automate transactions or other contractual obligations according to binding, pre-specified rules. Smart-contract advocates have long used the adage “Code is law,” and the new bill, if approved, could make this a statutory reality.
According to public records, the bill was referred to the committee on Friday. A summary of the bill, H.R. 8524, outlines its aims as follows:
“To amend the Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act to clarify the applicability of such Act to electronic records, electronic signatures, and smart contracts created, stored, or secured on or through a blockchain, to provide uniform national standards regarding the legal effect, validity, and enforceability of such records, signatures, and contracts, and for other purposes.”
Schweikart’s co-sponsor on the bill is Rep. Darren Soto, a Democrat from Florida, who has a long track record of developing and helping to pass blockchain-related legislation.
This includes, most recently, updating the Consumer Safety Technology Act to include the Digital Taxonomy Act and the Blockchain Innovation Act.
On Sept. 24, Schweikart introduced the Digital Commodity Exchange Act of 2020. The legislation would create a single, opt-in national regulatory framework for digital commodity trading platforms under the jurisdiction of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Again, Soto is a co-sponsor, alongside Rep. Mike Conaway, a Republican from Texas; Rep. Tom Emmer, a Republican from Minnesota; Rep. Dusty Johnson, a Republican from South Dakota; and Rep. Austin Scott, a Republican from Georgia.
The Blockchain Caucus, of which both Schweikart and Soto are co-chairs, was created in 2018. It faces the uphill battle of proposing legislation that can deftly navigate the complex and overlapping jurisdictions of different federal regulators in the United States vis-a-vis new financial technologies.
With this latest proposed bill on digital signatures, the congresspeople are in tune with similar developments in other countries; the United Kingdom has been reviewing its legal frameworks to clarify the interaction of smart contracts with British courts since 2018.