Bitcoin’s rally has 4 weeks to get its Washington CLARITY catalyst before the clock runs out

by admin

The US Senate returns to Washington next week with 20 working days to decide whether the CLARITY Act, which is the most advanced crypto market-structure bill in Congress, becomes law this summer or slips into another round of delay.

Data from CryptoSlate shows that Bitcoin has climbed about 10% this month after a bruising June, rising from late-month lows to briefly trade above $64,000 before pulling back near $61,881 late Wednesday morning.

The recovery has steadied market sentiment, but traders are still looking for confirmation that the bounce has more behind it than short covering and relief after weeks of selling pressure.

The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act has become one of the clearest candidates for that next catalyst.

The legislation is designed to establish a federal framework for digital asset markets and clarify how oversight is split between the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).

The bill’s supporters say that structure would give exchanges, developers, token issuers and institutional investors a clearer path through US rules after years of enforcement fights and agency disputes.

However, the measure has already missed one major marker. In May, CryptoSlate reported that White House crypto adviser Patrick Witt had publicly targeted July 4 for the bill to be signed into law.

But that date passed with no Senate floor vote, no cloture motion and no final deal on the issues still dividing lawmakers.

With the Senate returning from recess on July 13, its final scheduled working day before the August break is Aug. 7. That leaves supporters roughly four weeks to force action on a bill that has momentum on paper but no guaranteed path through the chamber.

The calendar has overtaken the bill

The missed July 4 target has shifted the bill’s momentum from legislative progress to floor time.

The Clarity Act, formally H.R. 3633, has advanced further than any previous US crypto market-structure effort. The House passed its version on July 17, 2025, by a 294-134 vote, with more than 70 Democrats crossing party lines. The Senate Banking Committee advanced the bill on May 14, 2026, by a 15-9 vote, placing it within reach of full Senate consideration.

While that record gives supporters a stronger case than earlier crypto bills ever had, it also makes the current stall more consequential.

The bill sits at Calendar No. 423 on the Senate Legislative Calendar, meaning it is formally available for floor action. But Senate Majority Leader John Thune has not allocated floor time, and no cloture motion has been filed to limit debate.

The remaining steps are still difficult. The Senate must debate the bill, secure 60 votes to overcome a filibuster, reconcile differences between the House and Senate approaches, and send a final version to President Donald Trump.

A July floor debate would show that Senate leadership believes the bill has enough support to spend scarce chamber time. It would also force lawmakers to resolve the two issues still holding the package back: how far to go on law enforcement language and how strong to make the ethics provisions.

However, a delay into September would leave the bill alive but weaker. Congress would return to a crowded agenda, with funding fights, election-year politics and other priorities competing for time. A measure that could not get a vote before the August break may find it harder to regain momentum later in the year.

That risk has pushed crypto supporters into a compressed lobbying campaign.

Kristin Smith, president of the Solana Policy Institute, has urged lawmakers to focus on the weeks of July 13 and July 20, calling the bill this generation’s market-structure law for digital assets. Stand With Crypto, the Coinbase-backed advocacy group, has also urged supporters to call senators and press for a vote before Aug. 7.

The campaign reflects the bill’s unusual position: close enough to law to affect market expectations, but still vulnerable to dying on the Senate calendar.

Law enforcement shift opens room

The push for a July vote gained a tactical boost after a major law enforcement group endorsed the bill, but the compromise that helped ease opposition could still become a new source of friction.

Last week, the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives (NOBLE) sent a letter to Thune and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer backing the Clarity Act.

The group said the bill would give investigators meaningful new tools while preserving existing criminal enforcement powers used in money laundering and unlicensed money-transmission cases.

The endorsement was important because law enforcement objections had become one of the most visible threats to the bill’s bipartisan coalition. NOBLE specifically cited provisions aimed at digital asset kiosk crime, crypto ATM fraud, money laundering and unlicensed money-transmitting businesses.

The group also backed the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act (BRCA) language included in Section 604, the portion of the bill that has drawn the sharpest scrutiny from other enforcement groups.

That section would shield developers and blockchain infrastructure providers from money-transmitter rules when they do not control customer funds.

Crypto firms view the provision as essential. Without it, they argue, software developers and network operators could face financial-intermediary obligations even when they never custody assets or move customer money.

Meanwhile, other law enforcement voices have been less comfortable. The Major County Sheriffs of America recently shifted to a neutral position after further discussions over Section 604.

The group said lawmakers still had room to strengthen the bill in ways that support innovation while meeting the practical needs of state and local investigators.

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