A sudden show of force from the U.S. crypto industry could shift the legislative calendar this week. More than 200 organizations—from exchanges like Coinbase and Kraken to venture firms like a16z and stablecoin issuer Circle—signed a joint letter on Monday urging Senate leadership to bring the Clarity Act to a vote. The effort signals that the industry sees a narrow window to secure a federal framework before the midterm elections complicate Washington’s agenda.
According to the original report, the letter was also signed by Ripple, Binance US, and dozens of smaller firms, project teams, and trade groups. The bill aims to divide oversight responsibilities between the SEC and CFTC, create a clear registration pathway for digital asset intermediaries, and preempt state-level regulations that firms have long called a patchwork nightmare.
The letter arrives during a week when top Senate leaders are hashing out what gets floor time before the August recess. Crypto lobbyists have spent months pressing for a vote, but the Clarity Act has faced resistance from some Senate Democrats and, notably, a vocal pushback from banking interests. Just last week, a similar legislative effort faced an organized campaign from banks seeking to water down key provisions. Monday’s letter is aimed squarely at countering that opposition by demonstrating that the crypto sector has a deep, coordinated lobbying apparatus of its own.
Signatories argue that without congressional action, U.S. startups will continue to head to jurisdictions like the EU, UK, and UAE. Circle’s participation is notable: the company just moved its global legal headquarters to a more predictable regulatory environment, a signal it is happy to send as Congress deliberates. European regulators already allow licensed trading venues and issuers under MiCA, while Hong Kong and Singapore have rolled out regimes that attract talent. The Clarity Act is seen as critical to keeping the U.S. in the race for on-chain capital formation.
The breadth of the coalition may be the story’s most underappreciated detail. It isn’t just large exchanges and VCs. Payment processors, custodians, and decentralized finance protocols all appear on the letter, suggesting the Clarity Act has managed what few crypto bills have—uniting a notoriously fractured industry behind one legislative vehicle.
A clear federal structure would remove one of the largest overhangs on institutional adoption. At present, even the most orthodox digital asset businesses operate in a gray zone where they can’t be certain whether their product is a security or a commodity. That uncertainty keeps prime brokerage desks and pension funds on the sidelines. The Clarity Act attempts to codify a safe harbor and registration system, which could unlock significant capital flows if it passes.
Developer communities also stand to gain. Without legal clarity, contributors to open-source blockchain projects often hesitate to build on U.S.-based networks. The current climate has skewed developer activity toward chains with clearer regulatory status in other jurisdictions or those that have deep pockets to fight enforcement actions. Passing the bill would likely rebalance that equation.
Despite the letter’s momentum, the Senate calendar is unforgiving. A handful of committee leaders remain publicly uncommitted, and even if the bill clears the Senate, it would need to be reconciled with the House version, which differs markedly on the SEC’s authority. Some industry participants have privately admitted they are preparing for a scenario where the Clarity Act stalls and the regulatory gray zone persists through 2027.
That outcome would be a blow to the RWA sector, where tokenized U.S. Treasuries and money market funds have surged past $20 billion on-chain. Many of those arrangements assume a forthcoming light-touch registration regime. The sector’s growth, as tracked in a recent weekly tokenization roundup, has been driven by institutions betting that clarity is near. A legislative failure would force them to reassess.
The letter itself does not move votes, but it shows the Senate that crypto has an emerging political superstructure that can mobilize quickly. For an industry long accused of being disorganized and allergic to Washington, Monday’s action was a demonstration of electoral maturity. Whether it is enough to get the Clarity Act over the finish line before Congress scatters for the summer is the open question markets are now weighing.


