The clock is ticking on the most important piece of crypto legislation in American history. CFTC Chairman Michael Selig has said that the CLARITY Act needs to pass, it needs to pass now, and
The clock is ticking on the most important piece of crypto legislation in American history. CFTC Chairman Michael Selig has said that the CLARITY Act needs to pass, it needs to pass now, and the window to get it done before August is closing fast. The goal, in his framing, is not simply to regulate crypto but to make regulatory clarity permanent and irreversible regardless of who occupies the White House next.
“We want to make sure the next administration, if it’s a Democrat administration that’s hostile to crypto like the last one, can’t tear apart all of our rules,” he said, laying out with unusual candour the political logic behind enshrining the framework in statute rather than relying on agency guidance alone.
“That’s why the bill’s named CLARITY,” he said, adding that the United States must remain the crypto capital of the world and that having clear statutory rules rather than regulation by enforcement was the only way to get there. If the innovation does not happen in the United States, he warned, it goes to China or some other foreign country, and America misses the opportunity entirely.
The Time Problem
The urgency is real. Only 16 legislative days remain before Congress breaks for its August recess, and the bill still faces active opposition. Lawmakers are working to resolve provisions around bad actors and ethics language that have slowed progress in the Senate.
Jamie Dimon Is Fighting It
The most significant opposition is coming from the banking industry, and its most vocal spokesperson is JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, who confirmed in a separate interview that he intends to fight the CLARITY Act directly. His objection centres on stablecoin provisions that would allow crypto companies to effectively pay interest on deposits without the FDIC insurance protections banks are required to maintain.
“The banks will not accept it the way it is,” Dimon said. “We’ll fight it. If we lose, we lose and we’ll live. But it will be fought.”
Selig pushed back on the banking industry’s reading of the bill, describing their interpretation of provisions around commodity exchanges as a misreading of the statute. He framed the administration’s position as pro-competition and pro-innovation while maintaining that investor protection and market integrity remain non-negotiable.
What Passes, What It Means
If the CLARITY Act clears the Senate before August recess, it would for the first time establish clear legal boundaries between the SEC and CFTC over digital asset jurisdiction, ending years of regulatory ambiguity that has kept significant institutional capital on the sidelines and forced crypto companies to operate under constant legal uncertainty.
Selig also pointed to tokenisation as the next frontier already taking shape, noting that brokers are already allowing customers to post tokenised collateral, a signal that blockchain-based financial market infrastructure is moving from concept to operational reality faster than most observers recognise.