The fight to pass the CLARITY Act is reaching a critical point and Senator Cynthia Lummis isn’t holding back about what’s at risk. In a post on X, the Wyoming senator pushed hard for lawmakers to move forward. She warned that hesitation could hand foreign jurisdictions the pen when it comes to writing the rules for digital assets. Lummis wrote:
Her remarks land as lawmakers, industry figures, and administration officials continue hashing out the future of U.S. crypto regulation news.
The crypto Clarity Act has become one of the most closely tracked bills on Capitol Hill. After clearing the Senate Banking Committee in May 2026 and previously passed the House with broad support in July 2025. The legislation is now pushing toward a full Senate vote.
If passed, the CLARITY Act would draw clear lines between regulators: the CFTC would oversee decentralized digital commodities. While the SEC would retain authority over assets meeting securities definitions. For businesses and developers who’ve spent years operating under a cloud of uncertainty, that clarity would be a long time coming.
Cynthia Lummis isn’t carrying this fight alone. Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott stepped up this week with his own endorsement of the crypto bill. Scott said:
His words reinforce the bipartisan foundation the legislation is building on and echo what crypto executives have argued for years. That regulatory fog is quietly pushing innovation and investment to other countries.
The pressure from the private sector is also intensifying. Stand With Crypto and more than 200 companies and organizations recently signed a letter urging Senate leaders to bring the CLARITY Act to the floor. The signatories include Coinbase, Ripple, Circle, Kraken, Uniswap and the Blockchain Association. For much of the industry, the debate has moved past whether regulation is needed. The question now is simply how fast Congress can deliver it.
Despite the momentum, the Clarity Act news isn’t entirely smooth sailing. White House officials are reportedly scheduled to meet with law enforcement groups over concerns about certain provisions in the bill. Particularly, developer protections that some officials worry could complicate illicit finance investigations. Ethics-related provisions are also still being worked through.
Several Democrats have signaled that these issues need to be resolved before they’ll back moving the bill to the Senate floor. It’s a dynamic that could prove decisive before the August recess.
For developers, the CLARITY Act represents the clearest shot yet at a legal foundation for building blockchain projects inside the United States. For investors, it could finally lift the regulatory uncertainty that has hung over the market for years. It can open the door to broader institutional participation. The coming weeks will likely determine whether this landmark crypto bill crosses the finish line or gets pushed into yet another legislative cycle.
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