Key Takeaways
- The Senate has about 20 working days before Aug. 7 to move the Clarity Act, with 60 votes still unsecured.
- Eleanor Terrett flagged June CPI on July 14 and Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s remarks as this week’s key markers.
- A new draft of the bill could drop within days as ethics disputes tied to Trump’s crypto income persist.
Eleanor Terrett, who covers digital asset policy for Fox Business, outlined the week ahead in a post on X on Sunday, writing:
“This week will be a busy one for economic data, Fed speeches and, likely, further clarity on the status of the Clarity Act.”

Image source: X
The first marker arrives Tuesday, when the Bureau of Labor Statistics releases the June consumer price index (CPI) at 8:30 a.m. Eastern time, followed by producer price index (PPI) figures on Wednesday. Both prints will shape expectations for the Federal Reserve’s next interest rate decision. Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, who declined to hint at a July move during the European Central Bank forum earlier this month, described inflation as still “too high.”
For the crypto industry, however, the bill text may matter more than the data. Sources familiar with the matter have noted that the newest version of the Clarity Act could be released as soon as this week, a rewrite negotiators hope can unlock the Democratic support the measure still lacks.
The legislation would divide oversight of digital assets between the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), delivering the federal market structure framework the industry has sought for years. The bill passed the House 294-134 in July 2025 and cleared the Senate Banking Committee 15-9 on May 14, but it has sat on the Senate calendar since then without a scheduled floor vote or cloture motion.
As Bitcoin.com News reported, GOP leaders are racing the August recess clock, with advocates warning the bill probably needs to get through the Senate by the end of July to stay viable.
Democrats, including Senators Ruben Gallego and Cory Booker, have demanded enforceable conflict-of-interest standards covering President Donald Trump and his family as the price of floor support. Those demands sharpened after Trump’s annual financial disclosure revealed at least $1.4 billion in crypto income for 2025, a figure that has become a rallying point for the bill’s critics.
Disputes over Section 604 and stablecoin yield, whether platforms can offer interest-like returns outside the GENIUS Act’s ban on issuer-paid interest, round out the unresolved issues.
The deadline pressure is widely acknowledged, given that the measure already missed the July 4 signing target Trump had hoped for, and observers now put the odds of passage in 2026 at roughly 50-50, down from about 60% in June. Senator Cynthia Lummis and other backers have continued to press for a July vote, arguing the bill contains meaningful consumer protections that should attract bipartisan support.
If the new draft wins over enough Democrats, a floor vote before Aug. 7 remains achievable. If it does not, analysts have warned the bill’s prospects would deteriorate materially.
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