US lawmakers are preparing to meet with 18 of the crypto industry’s most influential executives, including MicroStrategy chairman Michael Saylor and Fundstrat CEO Tom Lee, to accelerate plans for a US Strategic Bitcoin Reserve. The high-stakes roundtable, scheduled for Tuesday, will focus on President Donald Trump’s initiative to acquire one million Bitcoin over the next five years.

The proposal, known as the BITCOIN Act and introduced by Senator Cynthia Lummis in March, calls for the Federal Reserve and the US Treasury to fund the purchases through “budget-neutral” strategies, ensuring no direct burden on taxpayers. Options reportedly on the table include reevaluating the Treasury’s gold certificates and reallocating tariff revenues.

The event will be hosted by crypto advocacy group The Digital Chambers and its affiliate, The Digital Power Network. Attendees will include major figures from Bitcoin mining, venture capital, and traditional finance. CleanSpark executives Matt Schultz and Margeaux Plaisted, MARA’s Jayson Browder, and Bitdeer’s Haris Basit will represent miners, while investment leaders from Off the Chain Capital, Reserve One, and eToro will also take part. Traditional finance players such as Western Alliance Bank’s David Fragale and Blue Square Wealth’s Jay Bluestine will join the discussion, highlighting growing institutional interest.

Executives are expected to push Congress to clarify how the US can move forward with the Bitcoin strategy, while also probing why momentum has stalled in recent months. Advocates argue that creating a national Bitcoin reserve could strengthen America’s financial security and global competitiveness, particularly as other nations explore similar moves.

The BITCOIN Act could represent the most ambitious cryptocurrency legislation in US history, following the passage of the GENIUS Act on stablecoins earlier this year. With Saylor, Lee, and other heavyweights now at the table, Washington’s crypto policy may be entering a new era.