WikiBit 2026-06-23 21:21The weeks are growing short for the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act to thread the needle of the U.S
The weeks are growing short for the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act to thread the needle of the U.S. Senate, but talks continue in several distinct negotiations as lawmakers seek to patch the remaining rifts in the crypto industry's most important policy effort.
The toughest of the negotiations involves the Clarity Act provision to limit senior government officials from maintaining business ties with the industry, as is most prominently illustrated by President Donald Trump's own interests. Industry insiders have largely been watching from the sidelines as Senate Democrats including Ruben Gallego and Kirsten Gillibrand conduct close, three-party talks with Republican counterparts and the White House.
While the Democrats have rebuffed some ideas, they've immediately returned to the table, according to a person briefed on the talks. But no details have yet emerged about what the government officials' limitations might look like, apart from earlier suggestions from White House adviser Patrick Witt, who said the intent of his office was to ensure the restrictions affected a wide swath of government officials and didn't target the president directly.
Were the restrictions to affect Trump, it's also unclear how easily the president could extract himself from a complex web of crypto involvement, including digital-asset elements of his stake in World Liberty Financial, the crypto ties of other businesses such as Truth Social and his namesake memecoin.
Even if the ethics provision is worked out, there are three other distinct negotiations still weighing on the Clarity Act process: settling remaining concerns of Democrats from the Senate Agriculture Committee that oversees commodities; resolving the worries of the law enforcement community over the legal shield for decentralized finance (DeFi) developers; and the still-lingering dispute over stablecoin yield that U.S. bankers continue to press.
“The reason I'm optimistic is because every single senator and stakeholder that cares about this, including industry groups like the Digital Chamber, remain committed and remain at the table,” said Cody Carbone, the CEO of the Digital Chamber, in a CoinDesk interview. “No one has given up.”
Carbone's group is hosting a Tuesday fly-in event in which about 50 of its members from crypto firms including Hyperliquid, Elliptic and Anchorage Digital will head to as many as 30 lawmakers' offices to make the case for the Clarity Act. They're especially targeting senators who are outside of the negotiations, in the hopes of getting more of a rise of interest and support for a floor vote.
“We keep hearing that there are other competing priorities in the Senate, and while that may be true, everyone is still prioritizing this, and that's why you see readouts daily of different Senate groups meeting together, Republicans and Democrats sitting over lunch talking about passing clarity,” Carbone said.
Lame duck?
The period of the congressional session after the November elections, a handful of weeks known as the lame-duck session, has been held out by some lawmakers and crypto leaders as a backup option to get Clarity passed this year. However, that period can be highly unpredictable and crowded with congressional action, depending on what's left on the agenda.
Despite its remaining hurdles, some are still expressing strong assurances that 2026 is the year for the crypto market structure law.
“Clarity is no longer a question of if, but when Congress gets it across the finish line,” said Summer Mersinger, the CEO of the Blockchain Association, in a statement to CoinDesk. “Lawmakers are tackling the outstanding issues with real bipartisan resolve, and they are ready to turn years of debate into durable law that protects consumers, gives builders certainty and keeps American leading.”
But analysts are more reserved in their expectations.
“We believe that at least the Senate needs to pass the bill before its August recess for it to become law this year,” Beacon Policy Advisors, a policy research group in Washington, said in a Monday note. “While hypothetically negotiations could continue into the fall, incentives change around the midterms, and the odds that the bill will become law at all, not just this year, will diminish significantly if the Senate misses its August deadline.”
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By CoinDesk Research
Jun 15, 2026
In May, combined exchange volumes fell 3.45% to $4.41T; the lowest since September 2024. RWA perpetual futures volumes rose 10.4% against the trend, hitting a new all-time high.
Why it matters:
In May, combined exchange volumes fell 3.45% to $4.41T; the lowest since September 2024. RWA perpetual futures volumes rose 10.4% against the trend, hitting a new all-time high.
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