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Clarity Act Heads to Vote Today — But Bipartisan Deal Collapsed

By

Shweta Chakrawarty

Shweta Chakrawarty

The Senate Banking Committee holds a historic markup of the Clarity Act today at 10:30 AM ET amid high partisan tensions.

Clarity Act Heads to Vote Today — But Bipartisan Deal Collapsed

Quick Take

Summary is AI generated, newsroom reviewed.

  • Bipartisan deal collapsed overnight over DeFi developer protections in the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act (BRCA).

  • Over 100 amendments target Fed access and software liability, with the ABA pushing 8,000 letters against stablecoin yield rules.

  • Passing the committee "gate" requires all 13 Republican votes to advance the bill to the full Senate floor.

  • A clean pass could trigger significant institutional inflows, with analysts projecting $1.65–$1.80 XRP targets and $143,000 for Bitcoin.

The most consequential crypto regulation vote in U.S. legislative history arrives this morning. It is arriving without the bipartisan support the industry had hoped for. Overnight negotiations between a small group of Republican and Democratic senators ended without a deal. This leaves Thursday’s 10:30 AM ET Senate Banking Committee markup of the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act on track for a largely partisan vote. After months of negotiations, 99% agreement was not enough. Clarity Act 2026 news today is equal parts historic and uncertain.

What the Clarity Act Actually Does

Before the politics, the substance matters. The 309-page Digital Asset Market Clarity Act delivers the regulatory framework the U.S. crypto industry has been demanding for years. It classifies Bitcoin as a digital commodity under CFTC oversight. That moves Ethereum into the CFTC’s jurisdiction based on decentralization criteria. It requires stablecoins to maintain 1:1 backing with Treasuries and cash. It enables banks to hold digital assets in custody directly. 

Also critically, it includes the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act. This protects non-custodial software developers from being prosecuted under money transmitter laws. The bill passed the House in July 2025 with strong bipartisan support. Today’s committee vote determines whether it advances in the Senate.

How the Bipartisan Deal Collapsed

Senators Cynthia Lummis, Adam Schiff, and Ruben Gallego had been working through two outstanding issues. First, ethics provisions addressing the First Family’s crypto holdings. Second, BRCA protections for DeFi developers. Meaningful progress was made on ethics. The BRCA disagreement proved fatal to a deal.

Senator Lummis delivered a clear-eyed assessment of where things stand. “Ultimately, we have agreement on 99% of the bill,” she said. “I hope my colleagues across the aisle will work with me to get the remaining 1% resolved after we pass this bill out of committee. Otherwise, when or if another FTX happens, we will have no one to blame but ourselves.”

The five pro-crypto Democrats on the Banking Committee remain wild cards. Their votes could still produce a bipartisan result despite the collapsed negotiations.

The Anti-DeFi Amendment Threat

Over 100 amendments were filed ahead of today’s markup, including the DeFi Education Fund. It is tracking what it describes as a coordinated anti-DeFi push from Democratic Senators Cortez Masto, Andy Kim, Chris Van Hollen, Elizabeth Warren, and Jack Reed. Their proposals collectively target BRCA protections and non-controlling software developer safe harbors.

It includes DeFi front-end liability, tokenization provisions, and expanded BSA/AML obligations for developers and digital asset businesses. If any of these amendments pass, they could fundamentally undermine the bill’s developer protections. The provisions are what the crypto industry considers most essential for keeping innovation in the United States.

Industry Voices Its Support

Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse was direct about what is at stake. “Millions of Americans are already in this market. Ripple stands behind this bill because they deserve the same rules and protections as every other asset class,” he said. “If the largest economy in the world is going to lead on crypto, and it must, this is the moment. Let’s get it done.”

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong credited 3.7 million advocates for pushing the bill this far. He is calling its potential to make U.S. finance faster and cheaper a generational opportunity. Fidelity, Tether, and industry leaders across the board have lined up behind the legislation.

What Happens After the Vote

A committee passage, even on party lines, sends the Clarity Act Senate Vote to the full Senate floor. Where 60 votes are needed to advance. That threshold makes Democratic buy-in essential at the floor stage even if today’s markup is purely Republican. House reconciliation follows after that. The path is narrow but real. Supporters are urging that the remaining 1% be resolved post-committee. Rather than allowing perfect to become the enemy of historic progress. The alternative, continued regulatory limbo, risks pushing comprehensive U.S. crypto regulation into 2030. Today’s vote does not end the debate. But it determines whether the debate moves forward or stalls again.

Written by:
Review & Fact Check by:
Contributors:
Eleanor Terrett
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