Senator Thom Tillis has just thrown a wrench into the CLARITY Act's path forward. The Republican senator warns he will vote against the Senate crypto bill unless it includes specific ethics language restricting officials' use of digital assets, according to a report from Cointelegraph. The demand adds a new layer of complexity to negotiations that were already delicately balanced on stablecoin yield compromises.
Tillis's position is significant. He has been a key figure in bipartisan efforts to craft comprehensive crypto market structure legislation. His threat to oppose the bill unless ethics guardrails are included suggests that the final text is not yet locked, despite growing pressure from Treasury Secretary Gilliberty and Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong to hold a markup immediately.
The timing is precarious. A Senate Banking Committee markup is targeted for late April, and any single senator's objection could derail or delay the process. Tillis is asking for restrictions on how government officials can use digital assets—likely aimed at preventing conflicts of interest, insider trading, or undisclosed holdings. The crypto industry has long argued for clear rules for everyone, including regulators. Now, some lawmakers want those rules to apply to themselves as well.
Adding to the pressure, Coinvo reports a rumor that U.S. banks are actively pushing Congress against passing the CLARITY Act, with one source allegedly saying, "If this passes, we're definitely getting hit." Traditional financial institutions, which would face new competition from crypto-native firms under a clear regulatory framework, may be lobbying behind the scenes to slow or stop the bill.
Meanwhile, OKX posted a one-line tweet: "stablecoins. that's it. that's the tweet." Sometimes, the most important messages are also the shortest.
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