
The Trump ethics fight over crypto is now the biggest obstacle to the CLARITY Act reaching 60 Senate votes.
Summary
- The CLARITY Act needs 60 Senate votes to overcome a filibuster, requiring at least seven Democrats to cross the aisle.
- An ethics provision barring government officials from crypto dealings is missing from the current text and is Democrats’ core demand.
- The White House has rejected any language singling out a specific officeholder, leaving the two sides at an impasse.
Analysts and lawmakers have identified the ethics provision as the CLARITY Act’s most consequential unresolved issue heading to the Senate floor. Republicans hold 53 seats and need 60 votes to clear a filibuster, meaning at least seven Democrats must vote yes.
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, a Democrat who has backed crypto regulation, told audiences at Consensus Miami 2026 that the bill will not move without an ethics clause. “This provision will be part of this bill, or it will not go forward,” she said. “Because we cannot let greed and corruption in Washington tear this industry down, and without that provision, that’s exactly what will happen.”
Ethics impasse sets up the bill’s hardest vote
The CLARITY Act’s 309-page draft contains no conflict of interest language because such provisions fall outside the Senate Banking Committee’s jurisdiction. Democrats have pointed to Trump family involvement in World Liberty Financial and the TRUMP memecoin as the driving concern.
The Van Hollen amendment that would have blocked senior government officials from holding crypto business interests was voted down 11 to 13 in committee.
The White House has been explicit. Crypto adviser Patrick Witt said ethics rules should apply “across the board, from the president all the way down to the brand new intern on Capitol Hill,” but that language singling out a specific officeholder is unacceptable.
Cody Carbone, who heads the Digital Chamber, told reporters a deal will almost certainly be required before the bill reaches the floor. “I imagine the deal will be completed before this goes to the floor, because they’ll want to only bring it to the floor if they feel confident they’ve got 60,” he said.
As crypto.news tracked, both Democrats who voted yes in committee — Gallego and Alsobrooks — framed their votes as conditional on further ethics progress. Crypto.news also noted that banking trade groups continue to oppose the stablecoin yield compromise, adding pressure from multiple directions.
The Senate must resolve the ethics fight, law enforcement concerns and banking objections before a floor vote. As Coinbase warned at Consensus Miami, bipartisan backing is non-negotiable and the window before the August recess is narrowing fast.







