The new Biden era will inevitably see various changes in policies within all sectors with reforms in immigration, health and climate change already happening. Clearly, the new President has made it a priority to reverse the damages caused by his predecessor and is therefore nominating those who can be trusted with bigger decisions. 

Now, in a new move, President Biden is most likely to appoint ex-Ripple advisor Michael Barr as head of the Comptroller of the Currency – the treasury office regulating national banks and credit unions – according to a report from The Wall Street Journal.

Barr – similar to his forerunner Brian Brooks – has deep links with cryptocurrency. Brooks who served as the Chief Legal Officer of Coinbase before taking over the OCC role, attempted to make digital assets more mainstream in the finance ecosystem. In fact, under his leadership the OCC published a guidance that banks can use stablecoins for payments. This decision even resulted in him being criticised from some Congressional Democrats.

If Barr gets the role to head the OCC, he will most likely continue to bridge the gap between the government and crypto industry alongside maintaining the guidance that national banks use cryptocurrencies.

Barr’s impact on the crypto sector

Along with a crypto background, Barr’s career boasts of extensive financial experience given his long assosiation in the fintech sector. Apart from being an advisor for Ripple Labs in 2015, Barr served as the assistant secretary at the US Treasury Department for financial institutions in 2009. He was also a key part in drafting the Dodd-Frank Wall Street banking Reform.

Commenting on Ripple’s appointment, Barr admitted that the US payment system is outdated and in dire need for change.

“I think innovation in payments can help make the financial system safer, reduce cost, and improve access and efficiency for consumers and businesses alike,” he said at the time.

It’s important to note that Barr’s former employer Ripple was sued by the SEC for alleged sales of its unregistered security – XRP. While Barr will make the financial industry more crypto-friendly, the question awaiting is that will it also impact the ongoing lawsuit?

More stories on SEC-Ripple Lawsuit:

Despite SEC’s lawsuit, Ripple is scaling up its operations worldwide

Ripple teams up with 21 lawyers to fend off SEC’s $1.3B lawsuit

How the potential SEC Chairman’s stance against XRP will affect Ripple