The US Senate’s most significant effort to establish a comprehensive federal framework for digital asset markets, the CLARITY Act, is in imminent danger of slipping into May.

Amid fierce pressure from traditional financial institutions, Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC) is actively pressing Senate Banking Committee leadership to delay advancing the CLARITY Act.

The delay turns what was expected to be a breakthrough in late April into a critical test of whether Congress can finalize a broader crypto market-structure bill before the election-year legislative calendar closes entirely.

The stakes for the digital asset sector extend far beyond basic scheduling. The CLARITY Act serves as the Senate’s primary legislative vehicle for setting federal rules governing digital asset markets, aiming to resolve years of jurisdictional infighting over which regulators oversee trading platforms, token issuers, and spot markets.

While the US House of Representatives decisively passed its version of the bill by a bipartisan 294-134 margin in July 2025, the Senate has spent months paralyzed by a highly specific, narrow dispute: whether crypto platforms should be legally permitted to offer consumer rewards that resemble interest on stablecoin balances.

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The GENIUS Act and the stablecoin yield loophole

The current legislative gridlock traces its roots back to the GENIUS Act.

Signed into law on July 18, 2025, the legislation successfully established a baseline federal framework for payment stablecoins, mandating strict one-to-one fiat reserves.

However, the law intentionally left a critical gray area unresolved, failing to decisively settle whether third parties or affiliated platforms could structure products that pass yield-like rewards back to stablecoin holders.

That ambiguity has now become the chokepoint for the broader CLARITY Act.

US lawmakers are effectively deciding whether stablecoins will be legally fenced in as narrow, yield-free payment instruments, or if crypto platforms will be permitted to build financial products around them that offer consumers economic upside.

Recent data from the Trump administration has further inflamed the debate.

On April 8, the White House’s Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) released a report that directly undercut the traditional banking sector’s primary argument against stablecoin yields.

Notably, the banking lobby has long warned that yield-bearing stablecoins would trigger massive capital flight, draining vital deposits from local lenders.

However, the CEA analysis concluded that eliminating stablecoin yield entirely would increase traditional bank lending by only $2.1 billion, which is an increase of just 0.02%.

Furthermore, the report estimated that imposing such a ban would result in a net welfare cost to consumers of $800 million.

Even more damaging to the banking lobby’s narrative, the White House found that community banks would account for only about $500 million of that added lending in a baseline scenario.

The administration utilized these figures to argue that a blanket ban on stablecoin yield would do virtually nothing to protect the broader banking system while actively harming consumer returns.

Traditional finance holds the line

Despite the administration’s data, traditional banking trade groups have refused to yield ground.

The American Bankers Association (ABA), alongside regional groups like the North Carolina Bankers Association, is heavily lobbying Congress to adopt a comprehensive prohibition on stablecoin inducements.

They demand that these bans apply universally, whether paid directly by a token issuer or indirectly through an affiliated exchange or partner platform.

In fact, the ABA recently purchased premium advertising space in Washington publications like Politico.

The messaging explicitly urges readers to contact their representatives to eliminate a perceived “stablecoin loophole” in the CLARITY Act, framing the digital asset provisions as a direct, existential threat to the viability of local community lending markets.

This intense lobbying effort is designed to preserve stablecoins strictly as payment rails and protect traditional, deposit-funded lending models.

Banks argue that allowing crypto firms to advertise returns on dollar-pegged tokens creates an uneven playing field, pulling capital away from FDIC-insured institutions, particularly if digital rewards outpace standard savings account rates.

Conversely, the crypto industry views these rewards as an essential tool for customer acquisition. Industry advocates argue that a sweeping legislative prohibition would permanently enshrine traditional banks’ competitive monopoly in yield generation.

Meanwhile, the current environment mirrors a bitter stalemate reached in February. At the time, a high-stakes White House summit between banking executives and cryptocurrency representatives collapsed without an agreement, despite the administration officials attempting to broker a compromise.

As a result, frustrations among crypto advocates are spilling into the public domain.

Alexander Grieve, Vice President of Government Affairs at the crypto investment firm Paradigm, recently accused the banking sector of operating in bad faith.

Grieve stated:

“They just want to kill CLARITY. And if they run out the clock, they will.”

Notably, Patrick Witt, the Executive Director of the White House Crypto Council, had previously echoed this sentiment on social media, describing the continued lobbying by traditional finance as motivated by “greed or ignorance.”

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A punishing Senate calendar will ‘run out the clock’

Alex Thorn, the head of research at Galaxy, said:

“Senate banking markup delay raises the risk of CLARITY not passing in 2026. Every week of delay compresses the window for the steps required to reach POTUS’s desk. But a may markup isn’t fatal if it happens early and clears committee with a strong bipartisan margin.”

Considering this, if Tillis and the banking lobby successfully push the markup into May, it will not explicitly kill the CLARITY Act, but it will leave negotiators with virtually no margin for error.

The Senate’s official 2026 schedule is notoriously unforgiving. Lawmakers are slated for a state work period from May 4 through May 8, meaning any slippage at the end of April automatically pushes legislative action into the middle of the month.

The broader calendar offers even less slack. The chamber takes another state work period from May 25 through May 29, followed by a Juneteenth recess, and a two-week break from June 29 through July 10.

By August 10, the Senate departs for a massive five-week recess, after which the legislative focus shifts entirely to midterm campaigning.

For a complex market-structure bill that still requires committee markup, dedicated floor time, and intricate reconciliation with the previously passed House version, every missed week fundamentally threatens the bill’s survival.

Notably, financial markets are already pricing in the reality of a jammed calendar. On the decentralized prediction platform Polymarket, bettors currently give the CLARITY Act just a 48% chance of passing this year, a sharp decline from 82% in February.

With recent reports indicating that the release of the updated legislative text has been delayed yet again, it is becoming increasingly evident that the CLARITY Act will not enter May as the triumphant breakthrough the digital asset industry anticipated, but as unfinished business held hostage by a traditional banking battle.

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