Senate Banking Committee Approves Crypto CLARITY Act Despite Democrat Opposition - Blockonomi
by Trader Edge · BlockonomiKey Takeaways
Table of Contents
- Key Takeaways
- The 60-Vote Challenge
- Trump’s Crypto Holdings Block Democratic Support
- Timeline and Next Steps
- Senate Banking Committee approved the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act (CLARITY) in a 15-9 vote with minimal cross-party backing
- Just two Democratic senators supported the measure; significantly more backing needed to defeat a filibuster
- President Trump’s personal cryptocurrency investments create the primary obstacle to broader support
- TD Cowen analysts increased passage probability to 40% from approximately 33%
- White House aims for a July 4 signing ceremony if legislation succeeds
On Thursday, the US Senate Banking Committee approved the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act in a 15-9 decision, pushing forward legislation designed to establish comprehensive federal oversight of cryptocurrency markets.
Democratic Senators Ruben Gallego and Angela Alsobrooks crossed party lines to support the measure alongside 13 Republican colleagues. The legislation now progresses toward consideration by the entire Senate, though scheduling for a floor vote remains undetermined.
The Senate Agriculture Committee previously greenlit its section of the legislation back in January. These separate components must be combined into unified legislation before senators can vote on final passage.
The House of Representatives already approved its companion version 294-134, including 78 Democratic votes in support.
The 60-Vote Challenge
Final Senate passage requires 60 affirmative votes to bypass a procedural filibuster. Republicans must therefore secure considerably more Democratic backing than the pair of votes received during committee proceedings.
Benchmark analyst Mark Palmer noted the legislation will “demand substantially more Democratic support than that of the two senators who voted for it yesterday.”
TD Cowen analyst Jaret Seiberg upgraded his probability forecast for passage to 40% from one-third, while acknowledging significant challenges remain.
Joshua Riezman, Chief Legal and Strategy Officer at GSR, stated prior to the committee vote that chances of presidential signature during this congressional session stood under 50%.
Coinbase’s Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal projected greater optimism, predicting summer passage for the framework.
Trump’s Crypto Holdings Block Democratic Support
Numerous Senate Democrats indicate they won’t back the legislation without language addressing potential conflicts of interest. Their apprehension focuses on President Trump’s cryptocurrency holdings, including his memecoin project and his family’s World Liberty Financial venture.
Senator Raphael Warnock declared he couldn’t support legislation failing to address what he characterized as “pure corruption” regarding the administration’s digital asset involvement.
Senator Thom Tillis, who backed the committee version, acknowledged “more work remains in the weeks ahead.”
Senator Gallego stated plainly that without resolution of the ethics questions, he’ll oppose the bill during floor proceedings.
Banking Committee chair Tim Scott joined 12 Republican colleagues in rejecting an amendment addressing Trump’s possible conflicts of interest.
TD Cowen suggested Republicans want to avoid such votes with the 2026 midterm elections approaching.
Timeline and Next Steps
The Senate remains in session through May 22, reconvening June 1 and continuing through June 26. No floor vote on CLARITY has been calendared.
White House crypto adviser Patrick Witt indicated the administration hopes for a July 4 bill signing.
In separate action, the House Ways and Means Committee conducted a private Thursday session examining digital asset taxation policy, following December 2025 introduction of the Digital Asset PARITY Act.