CLARITY Act survives near-collapse after last-minute Senate compromise
The most significant piece of crypto market structure legislation in years nearly died on the table before a handful of senators pulled it back from the brink. The CLARITY Act, formally the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, squeaked through the Senate Banking Committee on May 14 with a 15-9 vote, surviving only because of a last-minute bipartisan compromise that included seven amendments crafted to keep wavering members from walking away.
Two Democrats crossed the aisle to join Republicans in advancing the bill.
Seven amendments, one very fragile coalition
The compromise that saved the bill involved seven amendments adopted during the markup session. The most consequential addresses a surprisingly contentious corner of the stablecoin universe: yield.
Under the revised language, the CLARITY Act would ban passive returns on stablecoins. Stablecoin issuers couldn’t offer users interest-like payouts simply for holding their tokens. The bill allows transaction-based and activity-based rewards, meaning users could still earn something for actually using stablecoins in commerce or on-chain activity.
The Warner problem
If you’re looking for the single most telling detail about where this bill actually stands, it’s this: Senator Mark Warner declined to support its advancement.
Without Warner’s support, the bill’s proponents got it out of committee without locking in the kind of broad coalition that typically signals smooth sailing on the Senate floor. The CLARITY Act requires 60 votes to clear a filibuster in the full Senate, a threshold that makes the 15-9 committee margin look almost irrelevant.
Banking lobbyists and their allied Democrats reportedly worked to slow the bill’s progress during the markup, a sign that the traditional financial industry views the CLARITY Act as a competitive threat rather than a complementary regulatory framework.
What this means for crypto market structure
The CLARITY Act matters because it would establish the first comprehensive federal framework for how digital assets are classified and regulated in the US, resolving jurisdictional conflicts between the SEC and CFTC.
The stablecoin yield provision offers a preview of the trade-offs that market participants should expect if the bill advances. Passive yield products would face a direct prohibition. Projects and platforms currently offering interest-bearing stablecoin products would need to restructure toward activity-based reward models or shut those offerings down entirely.
