CLARITY Act: 14 Working Days Left Before the Window Closes
The CLARITY Act entered what analysts are calling a do-or-die window Tuesday as the Senate returned from Easter recess with roughly 14 working days before midterm politics consume the calendar and the biggest piece of US crypto legislation in history risks dying on the floor.
- Senator Bill Hagerty confirmed the bill will go before the Senate Banking Committee in the current work period, and Senator Lummis separately confirmed a late-April markup target, but Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott has not yet announced a date.
- If the committee does not move by late April, the bill faces a Memorial Day recess followed by a summer dominated by midterm campaigning, effectively pushing any vote to 2027 or beyond.
- The best-case scenario is markup notice this week, a committee vote in late April, and a full Senate floor vote by late May, after which the bill still needs reconciliation between the Senate Banking and Agriculture versions and then with the House-passed version before reaching the president’s desk.
The Crypto Times analysis of the legislative calendar shows that for the first time, the White House, SEC, Treasury, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, and Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse are all publicly backing the CLARITY Act framework. That alignment was not true at any prior point in the bill’s legislative history. Garlinghouse said he expects passage by end of May. Armstrong, who withdrew support in January over stablecoin yield language, has reversed his opposition. Hagerty put it plainly: “There are several issues still outstanding — I think none of them are insurmountable — and I believe in April we’ll have it out of the banking committee.”
CLARITY Act: Why the Markup Date Is the Only Variable That Matters Now
Every other piece of the puzzle is in place. The stablecoin yield dispute that stalled the bill since January has a framework. The DeFi rules and ethics provisions are being worked out. The White House, Senate Agriculture Committee, and House have all done their part. The one remaining variable is whether Chairman Tim Scott announces a Banking Committee markup date this week. Without that announcement, the bill cannot move. With it, the path to a late May Senate floor vote is realistic.
What Happens to Crypto Markets If It Passes or Fails
JPMorgan analysts described CLARITY Act passage by midyear as a positive catalyst for digital assets, citing regulatory clarity, institutional scaling, and tokenization growth. Standard Chartered set an $8 XRP target contingent on the bill passing. Polymarket currently prices the bill’s passage odds at 55 percent. If it fails, the consequences extend beyond price: companies building regulated tokenized equity infrastructure, DeFi platforms planning US operations, and institutional allocators waiting for legal certainty all face an indefinite delay.
What Senate Democrats Are Watching Before They Vote
Senate Democrats have two demands that remain unresolved: ethics language barring government officials from profiting from crypto, and stronger DeFi anti-fraud provisions. The White House has said it will not accept language targeting the president individually. That standoff is where the bill could still break down. The 60-vote Senate floor threshold means meaningful Democratic support is mandatory, and senators who backed the GENIUS Act are not automatically committed to the CLARITY Act.

