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CLARITY Act faces Aug. 7 deadline after July 4 target slips

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The CLARITY Act did not become law by July 4, despite earlier hopes from White House crypto adviser Patrick Witt. Attention has now moved to Aug. 7, the Senate’s final session day before its summer break and the campaign season.

The bill remains one of the most watched U.S. crypto market structure proposals. Crypto.news reported that the CLARITY Act has passed the House, cleared the Senate Banking Committee, and sits on the Senate calendar. It still needs a full Senate vote before it can move closer to the president’s desk

Staff work continues on Senate text

Senate staff are still working to reconcile the Agriculture and Banking Committee versions. That step matters because both committees have jurisdiction over parts of digital asset policy. A single Senate text must be ready before floor action can move cleanly.

Recent crypto.news coverage said Senator Bill Hagerty revived hopes after outlining a new Senate roadmap for the CLARITY Act. The report said the Senate could release final text before lawmakers return from recess, while Bloomberg Intelligence placed the bill’s chance of passing this month near 60%.

Senator Cynthia Lummis has also pushed lawmakers to keep the bill moving. Crypto.news reported that Lummis said the bill would “lay the foundation for the financial services of the 21st century.” She also said, “The Clarity Act is this generation’s contribution to that legacy. Let’s finish the job.”

Vote math and policy disputes remain

The bill still faces a hard Senate vote count. Crypto.news has reported that the CLARITY Act likely needs 60 votes on the floor, meaning Republicans must secure Democratic support to overcome Senate rules. That requirement keeps negotiations active.

TD Cowen warned that the bill’s timeline remains uncertain before the November midterm election. Crypto.news reported that the firm pointed to ethics rules, anti-money laundering concerns, and questions over political support as issues that could slow a vote.

The bill would divide digital asset oversight between the SEC and the CFTC. Crypto.news also reported that the CLARITY Act would add exchange safeguards, customer fund rules, and funding for crypto fraud investigations.

Law enforcement language has been one of the most debated areas. Critics have focused on Section 604, which covers some non-custodial developers and software providers. Supporters say it protects builders who do not control customer funds.

Law enforcement shift gives backers room

Backers gained some room after the Major County Sheriffs of America moved to a neutral stance on the bill’s decentralized finance section. Crypto.news reported that the group withdrew its objection to the CLARITY Act’s DeFi provision while asking for more state and local law enforcement input.

The National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives also endorsed the bill. Crypto.news reported that NOBLE said the measure “contains several provisions” that could help law enforcement while keeping current criminal powers in place.

The next test is scheduling. If the Senate does not move before Aug. 7, the bill could face a much harder path after lawmakers return to campaign work. For now, supporters remain active, but the calendar has become the main barrier.

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