
The most reliably pro-innovation and crypto voice inside the SEC is leaving, and the unfinished regulatory agenda she leaves behind is longer than most observers want to admit.
Stablecoin rules remain unwritten. Tokenization frameworks are still in roundtable phase. Exchange registration requirements for digital assets have no clear statutory home.
The commission that must resolve all of it will do so without the commissioner who spent eight years insisting those questions deserved answers instead of subpoenas.
Hester Peirce, known across the industry as “Crypto Mom”, will join Regent University School of Law as an associate professor in November 2026, closing a tenure at the SEC that began in January 2018.
Virginia-based Regent University announced the appointment on May 19, alongside the hire of former Solicitor of Labor Gregory F. Jacob.
Peirce publicly signaled in March 2025 that she would not seek another nomination after her second five-year term expired in June 2025; she has served in a holdover capacity since. Her November start date at Regent aligns precisely with that exit plan.
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Peirce’s Regulatory Record: How Eight Years of Dissent Shaped the SEC Crypto Posture, and What “Regulation by Enforcement” Actually Cost the Industry
The mechanism here is worth understanding precisely. Under former chair Gary Gensler, the SEC did not publish rules governing token offerings, DeFi protocols, or crypto exchange registration.
It pursued enforcement actions instead, a pattern Peirce explicitly named as regulation by enforcement and criticized in dissents dating back to 2020.
Her objection was structural, not political: enforcement actions create case-specific legal outcomes, not the durable, industry-wide guidance that allows compliance at scale.
Peirce dissented in multiple high-profile crypto enforcement matters, including the 2021 DeFi Money Market settlement, arguing that some targeted projects “were not frauds but failed experiments” and that the commission’s approach “imposes significant costs and creates uncertainty.”

She also championed a token safe harbor giving development teams up to 3 years to reach network decentralization before securities registration applied, a proposal the full commission never adopted but that market lawyers used as a reference framework for structuring token launches.
Her dissenting record on spot Bitcoin ETFs is arguably her most consequential legacy. For years, Peirce publicly criticized the SEC’s repeated refusals, calling the agency’s posture “a paternalistic and lazy approach to innovation.”
The 2024 approvals, which she framed as “long overdue”, are widely credited in part to the legal and political pressure her sustained dissents created. That is the practical import of an internal dissenter with a consistent, documented record: the dissents become the roadmap that outside counsel and courts eventually follow.
Most recently, Peirce led the SEC‘s Crypto Task Force, launched in January 2025, which has held public roundtables, rescinded prior bank custody guidance, and added named industry members to advise on tokenization frameworks and exchange rules. The task force represents the institutional architecture she built in her final period, and it will now operate without her.
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