
The House Financial Services Committee has scheduled back-to-back hearings on July 14 and July 17, one covering Federal Reserve monetary policy, the other focused directly on the CLARITY Act. This is giving supporters of comprehensive crypto regulation their highest-profile platform yet as the pre-recess window narrows.
As of today, the bill has cleared the Senate Banking Committee, been placed on the Senate legislative calendar, and attracted a House fast-track commitment if the Senate moves first. None of that changes the core arithmetic: the CLARITY Act needs 60 votes on the Senate floor, and Republicans currently hold 53 seats.
Senator Cynthia Lummis, the Wyoming Republican leading the Senate push, has set the end of July as a hard deadline. She also warns explicitly that missing the pre-recess window could delay enforceable digital asset market structure rules until 2030.
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The 60-Vote Clarity Act Problem
The gap between “placed on the Senate legislative calendar” and “signed into law” runs through a specific procedural bottleneck. Invoking cloture to cut off debate requires 60 votes; with a 53-seat Republican majority, the CLARITY Act needs at least seven Democratic crossovers. The Senate Banking Committee vote on May 14 produced only two Democratic votes from Ruben Gallego and Angela Alsobrooks, and it is leaving five or more additional Democratic senators to be secured before a floor vote can succeed.
A bipartisan ethics provision in the bill has been fracturing Democratic support further, and Fox Business reporter Eleanor Terrett described the original White House target of July 4 as “logistically impossible” before the date even arrived. Galaxy Research has pegged passage odds at roughly 60% and notes that the window “effectively closes” once the August recess begins.
Even if the Senate floor vote clears 60, the bill would then require reconciliation with the version the House passed in July 2025 by 294–134. Rep. Dusty Johnson pledged on June 18 that the House would act “swiftly” on any Senate text, compressing that step, but reconciliation differences still have to be resolved before the bill reaches the president’s desk.
If this misses the pre-recess window, the next viable legislative opening is 2027 at the earliest, with some analysts pointing further out. The same credible basis for Lummis’s 2030 warning.
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July 14 and July 17: What To Expect?
The July 14 session before the House Financial Services Committee is formally structured around the Federal Reserve’s semi-annual Monetary Policy Report. However, its market significance extends further. It is reported that Kevin Warsh will deliver his first congressional testimony as Fed Chair, making it the first opportunity for lawmakers to publicly interrogate the new leadership’s posture on rate policy, dollar strength, and the regulatory perimeter around financial innovation.
For crypto markets, Warsh’s framing of digital assets, whether he treats them as a monetary policy variable or a separate regulatory question, will carry weight heading into the CLARITY Act hearing three days later.
The July 17 hearing moves the focus explicitly to the CLARITY Act and digital-asset innovation, with the notable detail that it is being held in New York rather than Washington. That venue choice is deliberate: New York is the largest U.S. financial center, and holding the hearing there anchors the bill’s stakes to institutional finance rather than abstract legislative process. Exchanges, custody providers, and capital markets participants concentrated in the city represent the economic constituency that regulatory uncertainty is actively costing.
Together, the two hearings give the bill’s backers a sequenced argument: monetary policy context on the 14th, market-structure specifics on the 17th. The CFTC’s expanded role under the bill, and the digital asset market structure framework it would codify, will be front and center at the New York session. The hearing is a narrative event. The execution event is the floor vote that has to follow it.
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