Congress just sent the White House an urgent message: staff the CFTC before the Clarity Act arrives. House Agriculture Committee Chairman Glenn “GT” Thompson and Ranking Member Angie Craig sent a bipartisan letter to President Trump on May 15. Urging him to nominate a full slate of commissioners to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. The timing is deliberate. The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act is advancing rapidly through the Senate. While the agency that would gain the most new authority under that bill is currently operating with just one commissioner.
Source: U.S. House Committee on Agriculture
“We encourage President Trump to nominate a full panel of bipartisan commissioners to join Chairman Selig in implementing the agenda charted for the commission,” the letter states. “A complete commission will allow the agency to best fulfill its mandate of promoting integrity, resilience and vibrancy of U.S. derivatives markets and will advance U.S. leadership.”
The CFTC is structured as a five-member commission with bipartisan balance. Typically, two commissioners from each party serve alongside the chairman. The agency has operated with only Chairman Michael Selig since late 2024. That vacancy creates a structural problem that goes beyond optics. Major regulatory decisions, rulemakings, and enforcement actions all benefit from. While in many cases require a functioning multi-member commission to produce durable, legally defensible outcomes.
Chairman Selig appeared before the House Agriculture Committee on April 16, 2026. He outlined a full regulatory agenda covering derivatives market volatility, technological innovation, and evolving market structures. The committee was clear in its letter that the agenda cannot be executed effectively by a single commissioner.
The Crypto Clarity Act News this week is dominated by the bill’s 15-9 committee passage. But the downstream regulatory reality is what the House Agriculture Committee is focused on. The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act would dramatically expand the CFTC’s mandate. It brings spot digital commodity markets under federal oversight for the first time and triggers a significant rulemaking process across multiple market segments.
The letter is explicit on this point. “Congress and your Administration are also working together to add to the Commission’s work through the adoption of legislation that significantly expands the CFTC’s mandate to bring spot digital commodity transactions under federal oversight, which would require a significant rulemaking process.”
In plain terms, the Clarity Act hands the CFTC a major new jurisdiction. A one-person commission cannot build the regulatory framework that jurisdiction requires.
For Crypto Bill followers and digital asset investors, CFTC staffing is not a procedural footnote. It is a critical implementation dependency. The Clarity Act’s effectiveness in creating genuine market certainty depends entirely on the CFTC’s ability to write clear, durable rules quickly after passage. An understaffed commission produces slower rulemaking, more legally vulnerable regulations, and greater ongoing uncertainty for market participants.
For developers building digital commodity products, futures, swaps, and spot market infrastructure. It’s a fully staffed bipartisan CFTC that signals institutional readiness to engage with the industry constructively rather than reactively. The bipartisan framing of Thursday’s letter, with both the Republican chairman and Democratic ranking member signing together. It reinforces that CFTC staffing has genuine cross-party urgency behind it.
The Clarity Act is moving. The regulator that needs to implement it is not yet ready. That gap is what Thursday’s letter is designed to close.
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