The CLARITY Act, which could shape the direction of the U.S. digital asset regulatory framework, cleared the Senate Banking Committee but still faces substantial political barriers before becoming law. MEXC Ventures said in a recent report that, despite the committee vote on May 14, 2026, the bill still must clear three critical hurdles: securing 60 votes in the full Senate, resolving partisan disputes over a presidential conflict-of-interest provision, and reconciling the bill with a separate measure from the Senate Agriculture Committee.
Committee win, but the real battle starts now
The CLARITY Act passed the House in July 2025 with strong bipartisan support, 294 to 134, and then awaited action in the Senate for roughly 10 months. On May 14, 2026, the Senate Banking Committee revived momentum by advancing the bill in a 15–9 vote. All Republican committee members voted in favor, and Democrats Ruben Gallego and Angela Olshansky joined them. That progress, however, is only the beginning. A full Senate vote requires 60 affirmative votes out of 100 to overcome a filibuster, so Republican votes alone are insufficient. In addition to the two Democratic votes secured in committee, the bill must attract at least five more Democratic senators.
This dynamic underscores that U.S. crypto regulation remains heavily shaped by politics rather than solely by policy debates. MEXC Ventures research finds clear industry demand for regulatory clarity, but many Democrats insist the legislation must address public ethics and guard against abuses of power—not just provide market definitions.
What the CLARITY Act would change
The CLARITY Act seeks to clarify the legal classification of digital assets in the United States and designate the appropriate regulator. To date, both the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) have asserted jurisdiction over many tokens, leaving exchanges and projects exposed to overlapping regulation, retroactive enforcement, and uncertain judicial outcomes.
If enacted, the bill would designate sufficiently decentralized tokens as “digital commodities” under CFTC oversight. Assets that remain subject to issuer control would remain under SEC jurisdiction. The bill also establishes a CFTC registration pathway for U.S. crypto exchanges and proposes limited exemptions from money-transmitter rules for DeFi developers and other blockchain participants that do not custody user funds. It includes consumer protections such as segregated custody for client assets, anti–money laundering requirements, and strengthened capital standards.
Paired with the GENIUS Act—stablecoin legislation that took effect in July 2025—the CLARITY Act could give the United States one of the most structured digital asset regulatory frameworks among advanced economies. That is why many industry participants view the CLARITY Act as more than a statute: they see it as a turning point for integrating digital assets into the regulated financial system.
The biggest sticking point: the presidential conflict-of-interest clause
The pivotal issue for passage in the full Senate is the bill’s presidential conflict-of-interest provision. Democrats are pressing for an explicit restriction to prevent a sitting president from deriving private benefit from crypto businesses. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand has warned publicly that she and other Democrats would withhold support if the provision is omitted. Senator Elizabeth Warren proposed more than 40 amendments during committee review, though most were not adopted.
The White House objects to language that singles out any specific individual or office. Administration officials argue the standard should be a general ethics rule that applies equally to all public officials—from interns to the president—rather than naming the president explicitly. That divide is consequential because it directly affects Democratic vote calculations. Compounding the challenge, crypto regulation is not a top-tier political issue for many voters, which reduces incentives for Democrats to trade votes on other priorities.
Coordination with the Agriculture Committee’s bill remains
Another procedural obstacle is reconciling the bill with a separate digital asset measure the Senate Agriculture Committee passed. The two committee drafts diverge on the scope of CFTC enforcement authority, oversight of decentralized exchanges, and the treatment of prediction markets. Lawmakers must harmonize those differences and merge the texts into a single bill before the full Senate can consider it. That reconciliation typically takes weeks and can extend longer if political disputes intensify.
As a result, timelines vary. The most optimistic outcome envisions early passage in June or July 2026, assuming negotiators quickly resolve the conflict-of-interest language and finalize committee text adjustments by May. Many legal analysts, however, view fall 2026 as a more realistic window: if talks stretch through the summer, a Senate vote could slip to September or October, with final signature by the president possibly pushed into November or December. In a more pessimistic scenario, the bill could be delayed by the 2026 political calendar and not advance until 2027 or later.
Why the market cares
The CLARITY Act is less likely to act as an immediate price driver for assets like Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH) than as a structural reform with the potential to reshape U.S. market architecture. Reducing regulatory uncertainty would enable exchanges, custodians, issuers, and DeFi projects to design clearer business models and could lower entry barriers for institutional capital. Conversely, prolonged legislative uncertainty would maintain overlapping SEC and CFTC oversight, increasing pressure on U.S.-based firms to relocate abroad.
For that reason, committee passage is symbolically significant. Since the January 2025 approvals of spot Bitcoin ETFs, experts have described this effort as one of the most consequential regulatory developments in U.S. crypto policy. Still, symbolism does not guarantee outcome. MEXC Ventures characterizes the bill’s core value as its potential to close regulatory gaps, but notes the final outcome hinges on securing additional Democratic support and reaching compromise on the conflict-of-interest provision. In short, the CLARITY Act could define the future of the U.S. digital asset industry—but for now, observers should temper expectations and focus on the complex procedural steps that remain.











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