CLARITY Act Headed For Markup: US Senator Tim Scott


The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, which is set to provide the US crypto industry with more regulatory clarity, will head to the Senate for deliberation next week, according to US Senator Tim Scott.

“Next Thursday, we’ll have a vote on market structure,” Scott told Breitbart News on Tuesday. “It’s important for us to get on the record and vote.”

“We have worked tirelessly for the last six plus months making sure that we had multiple drafts available to every member of the committee,” Scott said.

It confirms recent comments in December from White House AI and crypto czar David Sacks that the landmark crypto regulatory bill, which aims to establish a comprehensive framework for crypto market structure in the US, is set for a Senate markup in January. 

The House of Representatives approved the legislation in July 2025. If the Senate passes it without changes to the bill, it won’t need to return to the House and can proceed to US President Donald Trump for final approval.

CLARITY Act still has issues to be ironed out

Crypto executives have debated the potential impact of this legislation since it was first introduced in the House of Representatives in May 2025 and as the bill is potentially coming to a head next week, the industry is still divided.

MetaLeX founder and crypto lawyer, Gabriel Shapiro, said the US is “probably going to get a crypto market structure bill.” He added that there are still concerns around illicit finance, but there could be “some deal” worked out.

Others are less optimistic of it happening so soon. Galaxy Digital head of research Alex Thorn said in an X post on Tuesday that after reviewing a document from a bipartisan Senate meeting on Tuesday, it is “unclear if the two sides can come together and make that bipartisan as plenty of issues are still outstanding.”

Source: Alex Thorn

Thorn said Democrats are still pushing for several changes to the legislation, including requiring DeFi front-ends to comply with sanctions so interfaces can block illegal transactions, and giving the US Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control “special measures” to act against entities involved in illicit activity.

However, Castle Island Ventures founding partner Nic Carter said that the requests by the Democrats are “actually pretty reasonable.”

Market volatile on regulatory uncertainty: CoinShares

Some industry participants suggest the delay in passing the legislation may have played a part in recent crypto market volatility.

Crypto investment firm CoinShares recently attributed $952 million in outflows from crypto investment products during the week ending Dec. 19 to delays in passing the CLARITY Act, citing prolonged “regulatory uncertainty” as one of the potential catalysts.

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Coinbase Institutional head of strategy John D’Agostino said during an interview on CNBC on Friday, that he understands “why this is taking longer.” 

“It’s the kind of bill that is quite frankly more foundational for the growth of crypto or any real asset class,” D’Agostino said.

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