The sponsors insist the sanctions push is foremost a human-rights response. “Under President Bukele, tens of thousands of Salvadorans and even US residents remain jammed in megaprisons without due process,” Kaine said on introduction. Van Hollen added that Bukele is “taking American taxpayer dollars to imprison people as part of a scheme to violate their constitutional rights,” while Padilla called the crackdown “abhorrent” and said economic penalties are “a necessary step.”
Yet the text’s Bitcoin provisions signal Washington’s broader anxiety that a dollarized economy holding un-audited Bitcoin reserves could morph into a sanctions-evasion node—particularly if the Trump administration were to soften scrutiny. The bill would force the State and Treasury departments to expose addresses, custodians and governance arrangements for the Salvadoran wallets.
Because S. 2058 invokes §502B of the Foreign Assistance Act, any committee member can force it to the floor if the State Department fails to furnish the mandated reports—an arcane privilege the sponsors have already flagged they are prepared to use. Still, Republicans have yet to signal support, and the House remains an open question.
If the measure passes intact, the White House would have ten days to list sanctioned individuals and 90 days to deliver the report. Sanctions could not be lifted for at least four years, and only after a presidential certification that El Salvador has ceased both its mass-detention state of exception and any Bitcoin-enabled sanctions evasion, according to the proposed bill.
At press time, BTC traded at $108,821.