U.S. Rep. Warren Davidson representing Ohio's 8th Congressional District | Official U.S. House headshot
U.S. Rep. Warren Davidson representing Ohio's 8th Congressional District | Official U.S. House headshot
Warren Davidson, a member of the U.S. Congress representing Ohio's 8th district since 2016, has shared his perspectives on various legislative issues through a series of tweets. Davidson, who succeeded John Boehner in Congress and previously served on the Concord Township Board of Trustees, addressed topics including Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC), stablecoin legislation, and fiscal policy.
On June 18, 2025, Davidson tweeted about the necessity of banning Central Bank Digital Currency while emphasizing the importance of protecting self-custody and defining commodity-backed stablecoins. He stated: "Without banning Central Bank Digital Currency, protecting self-custody, or defining commodity-backed stablecoins..."
In another tweet from the same day, Davidson highlighted an opportunity for the House GOP to enhance existing Senate legislation regarding stablecoins and to ban CBDCs. He also mentioned the potential passage of the bipartisan Clarity Act to define market structure as part of implementing President Trump's Digital Asset Executive Order: "The @HouseGOP has the opportunity to not only improve the Senate's stablecoin bill and ban CBDC, but also pass the bipartisan Clarity Act to define market structure. Together this would implement President Trump's Digital Asset EO."
Later that day, Davidson commented on fiscal responsibility by addressing government spending and deficits. He argued against deferring spending cuts to future administrations and advocated for reducing deficits during the current Congress and presidency: "The level of tolerance for extraneous nonsense should be limited by deficits. Promising someone else will cut spending in the future doesn’t cut spending. We should at least move in the right direction: smaller deficits this Congress / this presidency."
Warren Davidson was born in Sidney, Ohio in 1970 and currently resides in Troy.