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Oklahoma Senate Rejects Bitcoin Reserve Proposal

Oklahoma Senate Rejects Bitcoin Reserve Proposal

A bill proposing a strategic Bitcoin reserve (SBR) in the Oklahoma House of Representatives failed to gain approval in the Senate’s relevant committee.

The proposal was rejected by a narrow margin of six votes to five.

Experts from Bitcoin Laws noted that the initiative lacked the necessary support, even though committee member Kristi Gillespie changed her stance to ‘yes’ at the last moment. She was persuaded by her constituents.

“Your voice matters! Please be sure to reach out to your lawmaker when a Bitcoin bill is up for a vote,” urged Dennis Porter, co-founder and CEO of Satoshi Action Fund, to cryptocurrency supporters.

In Oklahoma, Congressman Cody Maynard introduced the SBR bill in January. The document proposed granting the state treasurer the authority to invest in digital gold and other cryptocurrencies with a market capitalization of at least $500 billion over the past year. Only Bitcoin meets this criterion.

Earlier this year, legislators in several states proposed creating crypto reserves, prompting industry experts to declare an “SBR race”. Despite the expansion of such proposals in recent months to regions like Montana, Pennsylvania, North and South Dakota, and Wyoming, they have already failed in some areas.

According to Porter, 47 SBR bills have been initiated in 26 states in 2025. Forty-one documents are at various stages of consideration.

In total, lawmakers have introduced 177 legislative projects related to the first cryptocurrency at the regional level during this time.

Back in early March, U.S. President Donald Trump signed an order to establish a federal SBR based on assets confiscated by the Treasury.

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