Digital Asset Market Clarity Act faces tight Senate negotiations before August recess

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The CLARITY Act passed the House 294-134 on July 17, 2025. The Senate Banking Committee advanced the bill 15-9 on May 14, 2026, but the full Senate floor vote requires a supermajority of 60 votes to overcome a filibuster.

What the bill actually does

The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, formally known as H.R. 3633, draws a line between the SEC’s jurisdiction over securities and the CFTC’s oversight of commodities as those categories apply to digital assets. The legislation also tackles token classification, decentralized finance oversight, and consumer protections. Rep. French Hill (R-AR-2) sponsored the bill on the House side, while Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott (R-SC) has been the primary figure shepherding it through the upper chamber.

Where the negotiations are stuck

Three major friction points are complicating the Senate’s path forward: ethics rules, illicit finance provisions, and turf negotiations with other Senate committees that want a say in how digital assets are governed.

The August recess adds a hard deadline. More than 200 organizations, including Coinbase and Ripple, have publicly urged the Senate to act before that happens, warning that delay could effectively kill the bill’s chances in this session.

What investors should watch

The 60-vote threshold is the number that matters most. Any compromise language on ethics or illicit finance provisions will be worth reading closely. Stricter ethics rules could affect how certain crypto companies interact with regulators and lawmakers. Aggressive illicit finance provisions could impose new compliance burdens on DeFi protocols and exchanges.

The EU’s MiCA framework has already established comprehensive digital asset regulations, meaning every month the US delays its own framework is another month when crypto startups and capital have a reason to set up shop somewhere else.

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