Tuesday, June 30, 2026
banner

The White House invited law enforcement groups opposing the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act to a Monday meeting to resolve objections to Section 604, the provision drawn from the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act (BRCA) that shields software developers from money-transmitter classification.

Patrick Witt, the White House’s lead crypto adviser, is driving the engagement, but the bill still requires 60 Senate votes to pass, and roughly four weeks of floor time remain before the August recess.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune is reportedly prepared to bring the CLARITY Act to the floor in the coming weeks, regardless of whether Democrats are ready, according to Punchbowl News.

Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott posted on X Monday that the Senate “should vote on crypto market structure legislation in July.” The urgency is real. The political math is harder.

The bill passed the House 294–134 on July 17, 2025, and cleared the Senate Banking Committee 15–9 on May 14, 2026. Those are comfortable margins in their respective chambers. The Senate floor is a different problem entirely.

Discover: The Best Token Presales

Section 604: The Provision That Stopped the Clock

Section 604 of the CLARITY Act, the BRCA provision, is where the legislative fight is concentrated. It would prevent software developers who do not exercise ultimate control over their tools from being classified as money transmitters under Bank Secrecy Act rules, a protection the crypto industry treats as foundational for continued DeFi development in the United States.

The National Sheriffs Association sent a May letter to Senate Banking Committee leaders stating: “No good reason supports giving mixers, tumblers, and DeFi a blanket exemption.

While some software developers are not engaged in money transmitting or other activity that should subject them to BSA regulation, plenty of others are.” The group was invited to a prior two-day White House session in June, but did not attend, which is why Monday’s targeted meeting exists.

The law enforcement argument is not that the BRCA protection is wrong in principle; it is that the current language is too broad. Investigators working on sanctions evasion and mixer-facilitated crime say the exemption, as written, blurs the enforcement boundary around developers whose tools are functionally indistinguishable from financial intermediaries.

That is not a fringe position; it is shared across multiple law enforcement organizations that attended the June White House sessions.

Patrick Witt’s counter-argument is that the bill adds new prosecutorial tools and that the current regulatory vacuum is itself the enforcement problem. “We’re putting real regulatory constraints on businesses and actors that currently live in a state of uncertainty,” Witt said at an industry event earlier this month.

To skeptical law enforcement officials, he argued they “should be the biggest cheerleaders for this bill, because this is really what is missing.” Whether that framing moves the National Sheriffs Association off its stated position is what Monday’s meeting is designed to test.

Three More Problems Beyond Section 604

The BRCA dispute is the most visible obstacle, but three additional issues remain unresolved. First, regarding the Commodity Futures Trading Commission staffing question, the bill’s provisions expand the CFTC’s jurisdiction over crypto market structure, and bringing the agency to full operational strength remains part of active negotiations.

Second, an ethics provision that would bar senior government officials, including the president, from holding personal crypto interests. Multiple lawmakers have stated explicitly that they will not vote for the bill without it, including the only Democrats who voted for the bill during the Senate Banking Committee markup.

That second point is the structural bind. The Democrats, whose votes the White House needs, are conditioning their support on a provision the White House may resist. Senators Catherine Cortez Masto and Mark Warner have both signaled that the ethics provision is a threshold requirement, not a negotiating chip. That is not resolved; it is deferred.

Photo: Senators Catherine Cortez Masto

Third, Trump’s broader legislative posture adds a layer of uncertainty. His refusal to sign a major housing affordability bill, demanding a voter-identification bill first, has already disrupted one congressional timeline.

TD Cowen policy analyst Jaret Seiberg said Monday he expects the housing bill to become law through the constitutional ten-day automatic-passage window, projecting a Friday, July 10, effective date. Whether Trump applies the same resistance to the CLARITY Act is not yet clear, but the precedent is live.

Don’t Miss Out on Our $1,000 USDT Airdrop on ByBit

The post CLARITY Act Faces Senate Clock as Law Enforcement Pushes Back on DeFi Exemption appeared first on Cryptonews.

Crypto Regulation News,Regulation#CLARITY #Act #Faces #Senate #Clock #Law #Enforcement #Pushes #DeFi #Exemption1782814592

banner
crypto & nft lover

Johnathan DoeCoin

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar.

Follow Me

Top Selling Multipurpose WP Theme

Newsletter

banner
crypto & nft lover

Johnathan DoeCoin

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar.

@2022 u2013 All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by PenciDesign