The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025 cleared the U.S. House last summer, but eight months later it remains stuck in the Senate Banking Committee, where competing pressure from banks, crypto firms and consumer advocates has stalled the markup process with the 2026 midterm campaign season approaching.
Senate Banking Delay Keeps the CLARITY Act in Limbo
H.R. 3633, formally titled the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025, passed the House on July 17, 2025 and was sent to the Senate the same day. The bill was referred to the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, where it has sat ever since.
Senate Banking Republicans had announced a full committee markup for a digital-asset package including the CLARITY Act on January 15, 2026. That markup was postponed, signaling that negotiations within the committee remain unresolved.
The postponement does not mean the bill is dead. It does confirm that Senate action, not House passage, is now the sole bottleneck for U.S. crypto market-structure legislation.
Banks, Crypto Firms and Consumer Groups Are Fighting Over the Final Shape
The delay reflects a multi-sided lobbying battle over how the bill treats different types of financial firms. According to the Financial Times, U.S. bank lobby groups have been pressing senators to revise provisions they view as giving non-bank crypto companies a competitive advantage, particularly around interest or reward-like features on stablecoins.
Banks are not the only source of friction. Consumer Reports publicly called on the Senate to strengthen consumer safeguards in the bill before passage. Chuck Bell of Consumer Reports stated: “Consumers cannot afford more regulatory loopholes or weaker protections in crypto markets.”
On the other side, crypto industry leaders continue to argue the legislation is overdue. Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has said that “market structure legislation has never been more important,” framing the CLARITY Act as essential infrastructure for digital-asset markets in the U.S.
The fight is less about whether Congress should regulate digital assets at all and more about the specific design of supervisory guardrails, competitive rules between banks and crypto-native firms, and stablecoin economics.
Why Delay Matters as the 2026 Political Calendar Tightens
No official Senate schedule in the public record sets a firm pre-midterm deadline for the CLARITY Act. But the postponed January markup already demonstrates that lawmakers are losing time on the bill, and the 2026 campaign cycle will increasingly consume Senate floor time and political bandwidth.
The risk is not sudden death for the legislation. It is a slow loss of momentum as senators shift attention to election priorities. Major regulatory bills that stall in committee during a midterm year often fail to reach a floor vote before the congressional session ends.
For those tracking the stablecoin debate and broader crypto regulation, this bill’s trajectory could shape how digital assets are supervised for years. The situation parallels the broader regulatory uncertainty that continues to affect crypto markets, from stablecoin frameworks to how exchanges operate under U.S. law.
What to watch next: whether Senate Banking reschedules the markup, whether amendment negotiations between bank lobbyists and crypto advocates produce a revised text, and whether Senate leadership signals floor time for digital-asset legislation before the midterm recess.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.