US Senate set to finalize nomination of pro-Bitcoin Kevin Warsh as next Fed Chair

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The US Senate is scheduled to vote on confirming Kevin Warsh to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors today at 3:00 PM EST, the final procedural step before he takes over as the next Chair of the Federal Reserve. If confirmed, as widely expected, Warsh will replace Jerome Powell, whose term concludes on May 15, 2026.

This isn’t Warsh’s first time at the Fed. He served as a Governor from 2006 to 2011, joining at age 35 as the youngest appointee in the institution’s history. But his second act comes with a twist that has the crypto world paying very close attention: he’s openly bullish on Bitcoin.

The road to confirmation

The Senate Banking Committee approved his nomination on April 29, 2026, by a tight 13-11 vote. Then on May 12, the full Senate voted 49-44 to end debate on his candidacy, clearing the procedural hurdle known as cloture.

Market odds have reflected that confidence. Prediction markets priced in a 93.5% chance of Warsh’s confirmation by May 15, leaving very little room for surprise.

The nomination has been politically charged from the start, with debates swirling around Fed independence and the degree of influence the White House might wield over monetary policy under Warsh’s leadership. Former President Trump’s vocal support for the pick added fuel to those concerns.

What Warsh means for Bitcoin and crypto

Warsh has described Bitcoin as “the new gold for people under 40,” a statement that carries real weight when it comes from someone about to control the levers of US monetary policy.

Bitcoin’s price dipped toward $75,000 following Warsh’s Senate hearing, as traders digested the other half of his economic worldview: a hawkish stance on inflation. Warsh is likely to keep interest rates higher for longer than many investors would prefer, which is generally bad news for risk assets in the short term.

Analysts are split on how this plays out. Some argue that a more disciplined approach to inflation could actually benefit cryptocurrencies over the longer term, since Bitcoin’s appeal as an inflation hedge grows stronger when people believe the central bank is serious about protecting the dollar’s purchasing power. Others worry that delayed rate cuts will keep a lid on the kind of liquidity-fueled rallies that have historically driven crypto bull markets.

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