With 7 August as the last viable date before the summer recess, the legislative window on stablecoins and digital asset markets is narrowing
The Clarity Act was not signed into law on 4 July, as White House adviser Patrick Witt had hoped in May. The symbolic deadline passed without a vote, and the window for passing the legislation now narrows to a matter of weeks: 7 August 2026 is the last day of the Senate session before the summer recess and the start of campaigning for the midterm elections.
According to those following the negotiations, technical work is continuing regardless. Committee staff are still attempting to reconcile the versions drawn up by the Senate Agriculture Committee and the Senate Banking Committee. Once an agreement is reached, the public session required for a vote – including the cloture procedure and the 60 votes needed – could last only a matter of days. The problem, CoinDesk reports, is that the House of Representatives is going through a period of procedural deadlock that is also weakening any sense of urgency in the Senate.
The thorniest political sticking point remains the ethics clause. Following the annual financial disclosure of President Donald Trump – who declared approximately 1.4 billion dollars in income from digital assets in 2025, including royalties from his memecoin company, token sales through World Liberty Financial, and transfers to an Abu Dhabi fund – Senator Elizabeth Warren explicitly called for the final text to prevent presidents, vice presidents, senior officials, and members of Congress from profiting from the sector. Senator Ruben Gallego, one of two Democrats who voted in favour of the bill in committee, reiterated that without binding ethics standards he cannot guarantee his floor vote. The question of Trump’s income does not change the substance of the negotiation, but it gives Democrats a concrete figure to use as leverage.
August is approaching. The question is whether Congress will manage to close a negotiation that has been stalled for months in the space of a few weeks, or whether the summer recess will become, in effect, an open-ended extension.





