# Clarity Act Enters Four-Week Window as CFTC's Selig Presses Senate Before August Recess

The market-structure bill would split digital-asset oversight between the SEC and the CFTC, but a fight over ethics language tied to President Trump's crypto ventures is holding up a floor vote.

- Published: 2026-07-09T05:30:42.272Z
- Canonical: https://polylog.news/crypto/2026-07-09/clarity-act-enters-four-week-window-as-cftc-s-selig-presses
- Publisher: Polylog (Crypto desk)
- Section: crypto
- Sources: [Bitcoin Magazine](https://bitcoinmagazine.com/news/cftc-chair-says-clarity-act-is-so-close), [CryptoSlate](https://cryptoslate.com/bitcoins-rally-has-four-weeks-to-get-its-washington-clarity-catalyst-before-the-clock-runs-out/), [Polylog editors](https://polylog.news)

The United States Senate returns to Washington with about 20 working days to decide whether the [Digital Asset Market Clarity Act](https://cryptoslate.com/bitcoins-rally-has-four-weeks-to-get-its-washington-clarity-catalyst-before-the-clock-runs-out/) becomes law this summer or faces further delay. The bill, the most advanced crypto market-structure measure in Congress, would divide oversight of digital assets between the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), settling years of jurisdictional ambiguity over which tokens are securities and which are commodities.

CFTC Chairman Michael Selig, a Trump appointee confirmed in December, told Fox Business that lawmakers are "so close" and framed passage as a matter of national competitiveness, according to [Bitcoin Magazine](https://bitcoinmagazine.com/news/cftc-chair-says-clarity-act-is-so-close). The House passed the bill in July 2025 by 294 to 134, and the Senate Banking Committee advanced it 15 to 9, but no full floor vote has been scheduled and Congress already missed a self-imposed July 4 target.

The obstacle is not the technical design but the politics around it. Several Democrats are pressing for ethics provisions addressing President Trump, his family, and their crypto ventures, which Selig characterized as a distraction from a bipartisan opportunity. Separately, Senator Ron Wyden has asked Senate leaders to preserve the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act's language, as passed by the Banking Committee, in any floor version, [Cointelegraph reported](https://t.me/cointelegraph/70924). That provision would shield non-custodial software developers and validators from money-transmitter liability, a long-standing demand of builders who do not hold user funds.

## What this means

A statutory SEC/CFTC split would move US token classification from case-by-case enforcement to written rules, which lowers legal risk for exchanges, custodians, and token issuers operating onshore and channels institutional capital toward regulated venues. The exposed parties are US-listed exchanges and market makers that gain a compliance path, and offshore venues that lose the ambiguity they have used to serve US flow. If the August recess arrives without a vote, the status quo of enforcement-driven rulemaking persists and the marginal effect on risk assets fades.

## What to watch

- Whether Senate leadership schedules a floor vote before the August 7 recess, which would signal the ethics standoff has been resolved rather than deferred.
- Whether the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act's developer and validator carve-out survives in the final text, because its removal would leave non-custodial software exposed to money-transmission claims.
