RIBPI · 2026

Bitcoin Blueprint
for Blue States

A practical guide for anyone advancing Bitcoin policy in Democratic-leaning states. Messaging frameworks, bill templates, tactical playbooks, and real-world precedent from Rhode Island.

27 pages · Free · No email required

5
Bill archetypes
ready to adapt
7
Common objections
with rebuttals
6
RI bills as
worked examples
50
State precedents
referenced

The Messaging Framework

Bitcoin is not a partisan issue. Here are four frames that resonate with progressive lawmakers.

Wealth Inequality

The Cantillon Effect transfers wealth from wage earners to asset holders every time new money is printed. Sound money protects the purchasing power of wages.

Top 1% wealth: 35% (1971) → 50% (2024)
🌎

Financial Inclusion

1.4 billion adults worldwide remain unbanked. Bitcoin requires no bank account, no credit score, and no permission. Lightning remittances cost $2-4 vs. ~$19.50 traditional.

Median crypto holding: ~$620
🔍

Transparency

Bitcoin's public ledger is the most auditable monetary system ever created. Every transaction is verifiable. Financial surveillance of the powerful, not the powerless.

100% publicly auditable

Energy & Environment

52.4% of Bitcoin mining uses sustainable energy. Coal is down to 8.9%. Miners monetize stranded and waste energy that would otherwise be flared or curtailed.

Coal: 36.6% (2022) → 8.9% (2025)

The 1971 Frame: Your Opening Argument

The most powerful data in your arsenal: what happened after the U.S. severed the dollar's link to gold. These numbers aren't about Bitcoin — they're about what happens when money can be created without limit.

2.4x → 5.6x
Home price-to-income
12% → 40%
College cost as % of income
5% → 18%
Healthcare as % of GDP
35% → 50%
Top 1% share of wealth

The Policy Menu

Five bill archetypes ordered from easiest to pass to most ambitious. Each includes a Rhode Island worked example.

1

Blockchain Study Commission

The safest starting point. Commits the state to studying blockchain — no policy risk. Wyoming's commission led to 50+ laws. Creates an institutional home for the conversation.

2

Tax De Minimis Exemption

Exempt small bitcoin transactions (e.g., under $1,000) from state capital gains. Removes a barrier that punishes everyday use. Fiscal impact: $500K–$2.5M/yr (0.01–0.04% of revenue).

3

Private Key Protection

Prohibit compelled disclosure of private keys. Maps to Fourth Amendment digital property rights. Wyoming passed 31-0 in the Senate. A civil liberties bill, not a crypto bill.

4

Regulatory Sandbox / SPDIs

Create a controlled environment for blockchain innovation with temporary regulatory exemptions, plus Special Purpose Depository Institutions with 100% reserves. Only WY and NE have SPDIs today.

5

Strategic Bitcoin Reserve

The most ambitious archetype. NH, TX, and AZ have signed bills into law. Blue-state strategy: use seized/unclaimed assets (Arizona route) or cap allocation of existing funds (Massachusetts route).

The Blue-State Gap

Blue states are dramatically underrepresented in Bitcoin policy. That's not a weakness — it's a first-mover advantage.

Policy Area Red/Purple States Blue States
Strategic Reserve NH, TX, AZ + 13 exploring MA (pending), IL (exploratory)
Mining Protections TX, KY (128-0), OK, NE, MT None significant
Study Commissions WY (led to 50+ laws), AL IL (task force), VA
Tax Treatment MO (full exemption) None
Private Key Protection WY (31-0 Senate) None
Regulatory Sandbox AZ, WY, UT, WV, NE None

The Tactical Playbook

From first contact to committee hearing. What RIBPI learned moving six bills in one session.

1

Find the Right Sponsors

Prioritize committee alignment over enthusiasm. Seek bipartisan pairs — a Democratic primary sponsor with a Republican co-sponsor signals nonpartisanship. Target tech-curious and finance-committee members.

2

Build Coalitions Beyond Bitcoin

Partner with civil liberties groups (for private key protection), small business associations (for de minimis), and economic development organizations (for sandbox/SPDI). The bill should have more non-Bitcoin supporters than Bitcoin supporters.

3

Deliver Effective Testimony

Use the 6-part structure: establish credibility, state your position, name the problem, present the solution with precedent, pre-empt objections, and close with a call to action. Never read from a script. Keep it under 5 minutes.

4

Work the Staffers

Committee staff and legislative counsel shape bills behind the scenes. Provide one-pagers, fiscal impact analysis, and section-by-section breakdowns. Make their job easier and they become your allies.

5

Control the Narrative

Lead with data, not ideology. Use the Messaging Litmus Test: Does it lead with data? Does it name a real problem? Does it offer a concrete solution? Would a skeptic find it reasonable? If any answer is no, revise.

Objection Handling

The seven objections you'll hear most — and how to respond with data, not deflection.

Bitcoin wastes too much energy.

52.4% sustainable energy; coal down from 36.6% to 8.9% in three years. Mining uses 0.7-0.8% of global electricity and increasingly monetizes stranded/waste energy.

It's only used by criminals.

Illicit activity is 0.34% of on-chain volume (Chainalysis 2024). The transparent ledger makes Bitcoin one of the worst tools for crime — the Colonial Pipeline ransom was traced and recovered within days.

It's too volatile for serious policy.

Volatility is decreasing as the market matures. De minimis exemptions, study commissions, and private key bills don't require the state to hold any bitcoin. Separate the policy from the price.

Only wealthy speculators benefit.

74% of Bitcoin owners hold less than 0.01 BTC. Median lifetime crypto investment is ~$620. The de minimis exemption specifically targets small, everyday transactions — not whales.

We should wait for federal guidance.

Wyoming didn't wait — and passed 50+ laws that became the national model. States that lead shape the federal framework. States that wait adopt someone else's rules on someone else's timeline.

We don't have the expertise.

That's exactly the argument for a study commission. Archetype 1 exists for this reason — it commits the state to learning, not to policy. You don't need expertise to study something.

Ready to Build Bitcoin Policy in Your State?

Download the full 27-page Blueprint — with bill archetypes, testimony structures, objection scripts, and the complete data appendix.

Download the Blueprint (PDF)

Questions? Reach out at dan@ribpi.com or @RIBTCPolicy