A pivotal cryptocurrency market structure bill known as the CLARITY Act is approaching what may be its last chance for passage in this congressional session. Political leaders, crypto executives, and administration officials are mounting a coordinated push for a Senate floor vote ahead of the August congressional break.
The legislative calendar shows only four working weeks available in June, followed by three in July before lawmakers depart for their August break. This compressed timeframe presents a significant challenge for legislation that requires a complete Senate floor vote and subsequent House approval prior to presidential signature.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune recently informed Republican colleagues that their reconciliation package wouldn’t reach completion this month. As a result, the CLARITY Act now must vie for limited floor time alongside reconciliation negotiations, Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act matters, and pending housing legislation.
Senator Cynthia Lummis has emerged as the legislation’s most vocal advocate. She argues that American inaction on the CLARITY Act will allow competing nations to establish the regulatory framework for the coming financial era.
According to Lummis, missing this year’s opportunity would postpone the next viable legislative window until 2030. She emphasizes that this delay would leave cryptocurrency developers operating without clear legal frameworks while simultaneously depriving law enforcement agencies of necessary tools to prosecute malicious actors.
The Senate Banking Committee moved the bill forward in May through a bipartisan 15-9 vote. While this represented meaningful progress, it constitutes merely an initial stage in the comprehensive legislative journey ahead.
Beyond scheduling obstacles, the legislation faces substantive industry resistance. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon has publicly committed to banking sector opposition against the bill in its present form.
Dimon’s concerns focus on two primary issues. The legislation would authorize cryptocurrency platforms to offer interest-bearing accounts on customer deposits. Additionally, he contends that crypto enterprises aren’t subjected to equivalent anti-money laundering protocols and capital reserve requirements that traditional banks must meet.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has publicly called on both congressional chambers to advance the legislation. Following his intervention, Polymarket prediction markets showed approval odds increasing to 60% for CLARITY Act passage during 2026.
Senator Lummis has additionally framed the bill as integral to President Trump’s comprehensive cryptocurrency policy agenda, calling on legislators to deliver it for executive approval.
The coming weeks will reveal whether Congress can allocate sufficient floor time to bring this legislation to a vote.
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