CLARITY Act Thursday Markup Explained: What It Actually Means and What Happens Next

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CLARITY Act Moves Closer to Senate Vote

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There is widespread confusion in the crypto community about what Thursday’s Senate Banking Committee markup actually means for the CLARITY Act. To be direct: a successful markup on Thursday does not mean the bill becomes law. It does not even mean the bill goes to the Senate floor for a vote. It is one step in a much longer process.

Ron Hammond, Head of Policy and Advocacy at Wintermute, broke down exactly what is happening and why it matters.

What a Markup Actually Is

A markup is the process where committee members debate, amend, and vote on a bill before it can advance to the next stage. Think of it as the committee giving the bill its final shape before passing it up the chain.

On Thursday, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott will present the base draft. Members can then propose substitute amendments. The committee votes on those amendments and ultimately on whether to advance the bill out of committee. If it passes, the bill moves to the next stage. If it fails, the process stops entirely.

Why Amendments Are Flying In From Every Direction

Hammond made an important point about why over 100 amendments have been filed. Bills of this size and scope are extraordinarily rare in the Senate Banking Committee. The committee has passed roughly three major bills in the past decade, including Dodd-Frank, the fix to Dodd-Frank, and the GENIUS Act. That is it.

When a major financial services bill comes along, every senator with a pet project sees it as a rare opportunity to attach their priorities. Prediction market provisions have been attempted and removed. A credit card competition measure was attached to the GENIUS Act and thrown out. A housing provision has reportedly been included in the current CLARITY Act draft, widely understood as a political sweetener to secure at least one Republican vote from Louisiana.

The Senate, Hammond explained, loves to see what it can attach. These trains do not leave the station often.

What Happens After Thursday

If the bill clears the Banking Committee on Thursday, the work is far from over. The Banking Committee version covers roughly half the bill. The other half passed through the Agriculture Committee separately. Both versions need to be legally consolidated and harmonised into a single clean bill. That process alone could take two to three weeks.

While that consolidation happens, the real political work begins. The bill needs 60 votes to pass the full Senate floor. That means every Republican plus nine to ten Democrats must vote yes. Senate leadership will not bring a bill to the floor unless they are confident the 60 votes are there. The McCain healthcare moment, where a single unexpected no vote killed the bill at the last second, is the cautionary tale everyone in Washington remembers.

Democrats who are currently undecided or opposed will need to be brought across the line one by one. Each of them will have specific demands. The challenge is ensuring those demands do not contradict each other or water the bill down to the point where it loses Republican support.

The Real Question Heading Into Thursday

The immediate focus for the next 24 hours is whether Democrats on the Banking Committee vote yes on Thursday. If they do not, the bill advances on a party-line Republican vote. That is legally sufficient to pass committee but politically complicates the 60-vote hunt on the Senate floor.

A partisan committee vote means Democrats arrive at floor negotiations with less goodwill and more leverage. A bipartisan committee vote, even with just one or two Democratic yes votes on Thursday, changes the dynamics significantly heading into the harder fight.

Thursday matters. But it is the beginning of the hard part, not the end.

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