The CLARITY Act Needs 60 Senate Votes. The Math Is Harder Than the Markup Suggests
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The Senate Banking Committee advancing CLARITY with 15 votes — 13 Republicans and 2 Democrats — is a meaningful procedural milestone, but the floor vote math is significantly more demanding. Senate passage requires 60 votes to overcome a filibuster, meaning Republicans need to attract at least 7 Democratic senators beyond the 2 who voted yes in committee. The markup session demonstrated that most Democratic opposition is organized around two categories of concern: ethics provisions related to Trump's personal crypto interests through World Liberty Financial and family memecoins, and substantive policy disagreements about consumer protection, money laundering enforcement, and the bill's treatment of stablecoin yield. Both categories proved impossible to resolve at markup, with every ethics-related amendment failing along strict party lines and the partisan dynamic on policy amendments following the same pattern.
The path to 60 likely runs through targeted negotiation with the small group of Democratic senators who have expressed general support for crypto regulation in principle but objected to specific provisions or the ethics gap. Senator Catherine Cortez Masto expressed general support for CLARITY at the markup while introducing a law enforcement amendment that failed — a profile that suggests she could potentially be persuadable on the floor with the right modifications. The stablecoin yield compromise brokered by Senators Tillis and Alsobrooks before the markup was specifically designed to bring banking industry and crypto industry representatives to agreement, and Alsobrooks's yes vote suggests that framework is working for at least some Democrats. Whether the White House's July 4 deadline creates enough urgency to accelerate Democratic negotiations, or whether the ethics concerns that Warnock described as "pure corruption" prove to be a hard wall that cannot be negotiated around, will determine whether CLARITY becomes law this summer or gets pushed into a longer legislative timeline that historically has a way of consuming even well-advanced bills.
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Ethics concerns described as "pure corruption" by Warnock representing hard wall not negotiating position
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July 4 deadline creating pressure