In a historic victory for crypto, the House of Representatives approved three industry-backed bills on Thursday, one of which President Donald Trump will sign Friday afternoon.

Two of the bills drew significant — an unexpected — bipartisan support.

The Clarity Act, which would install the Commodity Futures Trading Commission as the industry’s primary regulator, passed 294-134.

Most Democrats, furious the bill didn’t include language barring Trump from launching or promoting his own crypto companies, voted against the bill. Still, the so-called market structure bill earned greater bipartisan support than a similar bill that passed the House last year.

The Clarity Act drew support from 78 Democrats. Only 71 Democrats voted for last year’s market structure bill, FIT21.

“The somewhat surprisingly strong Democratic support for the passage of the Clarity Act in the House means that there is a bipartisan constituency for this bill,” Eli Cohen, general counsel at crypto firm Centrifuge, said in a statement.

The Genius Act did even better on Thursday.

That bill, which will allow banks and other companies to issue their own stablecoins, passed the House 308-122.

The Senate approved the Genius Act exactly one month ago. With approval from both chambers of Congress, the bill just needs Trump’s signature to become law. The president has scheduled a signing ceremony for 2:30 pm on Friday.

Industry trade groups celebrated the bill’s passage.

“The bipartisan passage of the GENIUS Act is a watershed moment for digital assets in the United States,” Summer Mersinger, the newly-installed CEO of the Blockchain Association, said in a statement.

Amanda Tuminelli, executive director of the DeFi Education Fund, called it a “historic achievement for the United States.”

A third bill, the Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act, passed 219-210. Only two Democrats voted for the bill, which would ban the US from issuing its own digital currency.

Thursday’s votes marked the culmination of “Crypto Week,” which had been hyped as a celebratory moment for a once-embattled industry.

But things didn’t go according to plan.

A group of far-right Republican lawmakers held up a series of procedural votes this week, prompting Trump’s direct intervention.

The president brokered a deal on Tuesday night, only for that deal to fall apart on Wednesday. After a record-breaking 10-hour vote, the bills cleared their final hurdle late Wednesday, allowing Thursday’s votes, which sent the Genius Act to the president and the other two bills to the Senate.

Despite Thursday’s bipartisan showing, market structure legislation is expected to face steeper odds in the Senate, where 60 votes are typically needed for a bill’s passage.

Senators have yet to file their own market structure bill. But Democrats on the Senate Committee on Housing, Banking, and Urban Affairs have expressed skepticism over Republicans’ stated principles for such legislation.

“It’s critical that any crypto regulation bill we pass does not have massive unintended consequences,” Senator Elizabeth Warren, a Democrat from Massachusetts, said last week.

Aleks Gilbert is DL News’ New York-based DeFi correspondent. You can reach him at [email protected].