
The post Why the CLARITY Act Could Still Fail Despite Major Senate Progress appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
The long-awaited Clarity Act was passed on 14th May by the Senate Banking Committee with a bipartisan 15-9 vote. Despite growing optimism across crypto markets, the crypto market bill still faces several major political and regulatory obstacles.Β
Which could still stop the CLARITY Act from becoming official U.S. law. Hereβs how?
Senate Bill Merger Still Creates Risk
One of the first major hurdles comes from merging two separate Senate versions of the legislation.
The Banking Committeeβs bill focuses mainly on financial regulation, while the Senate Agriculture Committee version handles commodity classifications and CFTC oversight.
Both versions now need to be combined into a single unified amendment before reaching the Senate floor.
The 60-Vote Senate Problem
Even if Republicans largely support the bill, the CLARITY Act still faces the Senateβs β60-vote wall.β
Because Republicans currently control 53 Senate seats, the legislation still requires support from at least seven Democrats to move forward. That makes bipartisan negotiations absolutely critical.
Trump Crypto Conflict Could Ethics Law
Another major issue centers around ethics provisions linked to crypto investments by public officials.
Several Democrats want stricter language preventing presidents, lawmakers, and government officials from profiting from digital asset ventures while in office. That debate directly affects Donald Trump because of his familyβs growing involvement in crypto-related businesses, including WLFI.
Republican allies have reportedly warned that overly aggressive ethics clauses targeting Trump-linked crypto projects could trigger strong White House opposition or even a potential veto threat.
If Democrats refuse to support the bill over unresolved ethics or regulatory concerns, the bill could stall entirely despite committee approval.
Banking Lobby and House Reconciliation Could Delay Progress
Traditional banking groups are also actively lobbying against parts of the legislation. Banks are reportedly pushing lawmakers to tighten stablecoin yield rules further, weaken DeFi protections, and reduce developer safe-harbor provisions.
At the same time, the House already passed its own crypto market structure bill in 2025. That means both chambers must still negotiate a final unified version before any legislation reaches the Presidentβs desk.
The August Deadline Is Becoming Critical
Lastly, timing may now become one of the biggest threats to the billβs future.
Lawmakers are under pressure to complete Senate voting and House reconciliation before Congress enters its August recess period.
If the legislation misses that political window, attention could quickly shift toward midterm election campaigns, potentially delaying serious crypto legislation for years.
Even if eventually approved, implementation would still take time because both the SEC and CFTC must spend roughly 360 days writing the final regulatory rules.
July 4 Becomes Key Target Date for CLARITY Act
Senator Bernie Moreno said lawmakers are now pushing to move the Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act to the Presidentβs desk before the end of June, with hopes of officially signing the crypto bill into law before July 4.Β
However, despite the growing urgency around the legislation, the official markup schedule has still not been announced.

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