HomeNewsLummis Sees Senate Clarity Act Vote Before August

Lummis Sees Senate Clarity Act Vote Before August

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U.S. Senator Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming said she expects the Senate could take up the CLARITY Act before the chamber’s August recess, putting a potential floor vote on digital asset market structure legislation within weeks. Speaking with host Spencer Nichols on the Bitcoin Magazine podcast on June 24, Lummis framed the bill as central to keeping crypto activity, investor protections, and illicit finance controls inside the United States.

Lummis Eyes Senate Clarity Act Vote by August

Lummis said she is “very hopeful” the Senate will vote on the CLARITY Act before the August recess, while making clear that a July 4 target is unlikely given the chamber’s legislative calendar. “Congress generally is not in session in August. The Senate will be in session the first week of August and not the remainder of the month. I very much want to see Clarity addressed on the Senate floor before that,” she said.

The Wyoming senator described the next step as a process of combining work from two Senate committees. The Agriculture Committee portion addresses the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s role in digital asset oversight, while the Banking Committee portion addresses the Securities and Exchange Commission’s role. Lummis said that process still needs time, especially as lawmakers work through ethics provisions tied to elected officials’ conduct involving digital assets.

She also pointed to competing floor priorities, including the National Defense Authorization Act and FISA reauthorization, as reasons the bill is not likely to move before July 4. “We’re also working to get some ethics language addressed, which talks about what conduct elected officials will be forbidden from when it comes to digital assets and what the enforcement action is. We’re making progress there and I think that we need to get that addressed before we can get the bill scheduled on the floor,” Lummis said. “I don’t see that getting done before July 4th.”

Ethics Talks Remain Key Hurdle for Crypto Bill

The ethics language remains one of the main unresolved items before the CLARITY Act can be scheduled for a Senate floor vote. Lummis did not detail the specific restrictions under discussion, but said the provisions would define prohibited conduct for elected officials involving digital assets and set out enforcement mechanisms. Her comments indicate that the market structure bill is moving in parallel with political accountability negotiations, not just agency-jurisdiction talks.

Lummis argued that the absence of a federal crypto framework risks pushing the industry offshore and weakening U.S. oversight. “If America wants to lead in financial services, which it always has, we need to put a regulatory framework that is well understood in place because we don’t want the digital asset community to relocate to Singapore, or to Switzerland, to other countries that have already passed regulatory frameworks,” she said. “So, our lack of a regulatory framework puts the United States at risk of losing this industry. And if we lose the industry, we also lose the opportunity to regulate the industry and protect consumers.”

She cited a case involving a U.S.-based company that had identified $200 million in stablecoins headed for North Korea but did not freeze the funds because of liability concerns in the absence of clear rules. “They had the technical capabilities of freezing that money and stopping it from going to North Korea, but there’s no regulatory framework, and they didn’t want to risk the liability to them of undertaking this without clear regulatory guidance. And so, they let it go. That kind of thing would not happen if we passed the CLARITY Act,” Lummis said.

Lummis’ timeline puts July as the key window for Senate action, with ethics negotiations and committee consolidation determining whether the CLARITY Act reaches the floor before the August break. For crypto markets and policy teams, the bill remains a central test of whether Congress can replace enforcement-led oversight with a statutory framework defining how digital asset firms interact with the SEC, the CFTC, banking rules, and illicit finance obligations.

AI Transparency Note: This article was prepared with the assistance of an AI system based on the sources listed and was reviewed, edited, and approved by a human editor before publication. All quotes, data points, and factual claims are intended to be grounded in the cited source material; however, errors cannot be ruled out entirely.

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