CLARITY Act News: Senate negotiators face a tight two-week window before lawmakers return to Washington on July 13.
Staff from both parties, White House officials, and crypto industry representatives are working to settle remaining disputes. Their work could decide whether the crypto market structure bill reaches the Senate floor in July.
The Senate recess has shifted the CLARITY Act debate away from public hearings and into private negotiations. Congressional staff is trying to align separate versions developed by the Senate Banking Committee and the Senate Agriculture Committee.
The talks cover several unresolved areas, including ethics rules, illicit finance language, and market oversight standards. Negotiators also need to decide how the bill should handle conflicts of interest at crypto exchanges.
Clarity Act News | Source: X
The Agriculture Committee text remains a major focus. Sources close to the process say lawmakers need agreement on federal preemption of state rules, affiliate trading limits, and exchange conduct.
Those details could shape how federal and state regulators share authority over crypto trading platforms.
Once senators return, the process will move from policy talks to floor planning. Senate Majority Leader John Thune has said the National Defense Authorization Act will take priority during the week of July 13.
The current schedule leaves a narrow path for a July vote. If the Senate first takes up the defense bill, the CLARITY Act may move later in July or early August.
Supporters want action before Congress leaves for its summer recess. A delay beyond that point could make passage harder during the rest of 2026, as election-year politics and other bills compete for time.
The bill needs at least 60 Senate votes to advance. Republicans hold 53 seats, but full Republican support remains uncertain after Senators Josh Hawley and Rand Paul opposed the GENIUS Act during earlier floor action.
That vote math means Democrats remain central to the bill’s path. Some Democratic support may depend on stronger ethics language tied to crypto assets connected to public officials.
Ethics rules have become one of the main issues in the negotiations. A revised draft could allow state attorneys general to sue exchanges that list tokens issued by public officials in breach of the act.
That proposal aims to address concerns from Democrats who want firmer limits around public officials and crypto markets. Any final compromise will still need support from the White House before it can move forward.
Law enforcement groups have also raised concerns over Section 604, which includes the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act. They argue that the current language could make onchain crime investigations harder.
Some crypto industry participants support targeted changes to that section. Lawmakers may revise the language to answer law enforcement concerns while keeping protections for developers and service providers. The talks may also decide how the bill treats software activity that does not involve customer custody.
Republican senators have renewed pressure to move the bill before the August break. Senator Tim Scott has backed a July vote and said the legislation would set clear rules for digital asset markets.
Scott also argued that the bill would support consumer protection and keep crypto innovation in the United States. His support adds momentum, but it does not remove the need for bipartisan votes. The Senate must still settle the text, secure enough support, and find floor time.
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