Former Senate advisor Connor Brown has emerged as a leading advocate for integrating Bitcoin into U.S. fiscal policy, describing it as the only credible way to defuse the country’s growing debt bomb.
Bitcoin as a structural solution
Brown, who previously advised Senator Cynthia Lummis and now leads strategy at the Bitcoin Policy Institute (BPI), frames Bitcoin as a nonpartisan technological shift akin to the Internet.
He notes the urgency for bold, asymmetric bets to address fiscal challenges, stating:
“One of the only ways to truly solve this is you take an outsized bet on an emerging paradigm.”
He draws lessons from history, aiming to avoid a repeat of the 1934 Gold Reserve Act, and underscores the need to protect self-custody and ensure the state becomes a user of Bitcoin, not a controller. As Brown puts it:
“Let’s take the lessons from the Gold Reserve Act and build its antithesis.”
Working with policymakers and education
Brown details his work with Senator Lummis, which included drafting the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve (SBR) bill.
The focus was on aligning government incentives with Bitcoiners while ensuring individual rights are protected. He highlights the bottleneck in D.C. as a lack of education, observing:
“We need to dramatically increase the Bitcoiner density of Washington, D.C.”
He is spearheading initiatives like a Congressional Fellowship and Satoshi Scholars to bring more subject-matter experts to Capitol Hill. Brown emphasizes the value of engagement:
“You may not care about politics, but politics cares about you.”
Bitcoin for fiscal and technological resilience
Brown argues that legacy tools are inadequate for current economic challenges, suggesting Bitcoin can stabilize fiscal policy, coordinate energy grids, and serve as a long-horizon solution for the AI era.
He believes that a U.S. Bitcoin reserve could prevent future policy overreach and foster national resilience. As he asserts:
“Bitcoin is literally the only thing that can diffuse this bomb.”
Policy momentum and the path forward
Although initial support for the SBR was limited, Brown describes how persistent education and outreach led to bipartisan co-sponsors. He remains optimistic about formalizing Bitcoin’s role at the federal level, stating:
“The only winning move is to play.”
Brown concludes that integrating Bitcoin into U.S. policy is vital to avoid capital flight and political polarization, positioning the country to lead in a sound-money digital economy.