The U.S. Senate’s long-awaited crypto market-structure bill now faces a tight timetable that could collapse if lawmakers don’t move it before midterm campaigning ramps up, NYDIG warned in a market note Friday. Why it matters - The legislation aims to clarify oversight of digital assets — a change NYDIG says could materially boost institutional confidence in crypto by settling who regulates what, including formally placing Bitcoin under the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) as a commodity. - If it fails, the industry could be left with continued regulatory uncertainty around Bitcoin, decentralized finance enforcement, stablecoin rules and other key areas. Where things stand - The bill cleared a hurdle Thursday when the Senate Banking Committee advanced it largely along party lines after months of negotiations on stablecoin rules, ethics language and how government officials interacting with crypto would be treated. - White House crypto adviser Patrick Witt previously suggested a July 4 passage was possible, but NYDIG head of research Greg Cipolaro calls that an “aspirational benchmark.” NYDIG says a realistic window to get the measure through Congress runs June to early August. The political clock - With Republicans holding 53 Senate seats, the bill likely needs at least seven Democrats to reach the 60 votes required to avoid extended debate and move quickly on the floor. - Several Democrats remain concerned the draft doesn’t adequately address illicit finance and sanctions-evasion risks. - Congress is set to recess from late July to early September, after which midterm campaigning will dominate. NYDIG warns Senate leadership may avoid a divisive, bipartisan vote once campaigning intensifies. - If the bill doesn’t advance before recess, the next chance may be a post-election lame-duck session — but that outcome depends on Republicans keeping Senate control and Majority Leader John Thune prioritizing crypto alongside must-pass government-funding talks. Political outlook and tradeoffs - Current forecasts show a closely contested Senate, with several tossup seats that could flip control to Democrats. NYDIG notes a Democratic-controlled Senate after January would likely reduce the odds of the current, Republican-backed proposal advancing. - Lawmakers face a choice: approve an imperfect bipartisan framework now, or risk reopening negotiations under a potentially different political balance after the elections. Bottom line Passage could give U.S. crypto markets clearer rules and reassure institutional investors; failure would prolong jurisdictional uncertainty and leave key disputes — from DeFi enforcement to ethics provisions — unresolved as the congressional window narrows.
U.S. Senate Crypto Bill Faces Tight Deadline Amid Midterm Election Pressure
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U.S. Senate crypto legislation faces a tight timeline as lawmakers race to act before midterms. The bill seeks to define Bitcoin’s regulatory status under the CFTC and outline stablecoin rules. The Senate Banking Committee passed the measure along party lines, but NYDIG says a July 4 vote is unlikely, with a June to early August window more realistic. With 53 Senate seats held by Republicans, the bill needs at least seven Democrats to pass. Delays could push action to a post-election session, depending on GOP control and priorities. The CFT (Countering the Financing of Terrorism) provisions remain a key focus in shaping the final text.
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