The economist behind a new daily crypto policy channel argues that the real battle over the awaited Clarity Act isn’t about stablecoins or market structure, but about whether Democrats would rather weaponize “crypto ethics” against Republicans than pass a bill the industry itself says only 1% of voters care about.
In a detailed breakdown of Senate maneuvering, Dana Love, PhD pegs the odds of the Clarity Act becoming law by 2026 at just 35% and notes that prediction markets and institutional hedges are starting to quietly move in the same direction.
Ethics Amendments Become The Political Furnace
The YouTube video centers on a quote from a senior Democratic Senate staffer: the fate of the bill “boils down to one thing” — whether “hanging the ethics thing on Republicans” is more valuable to Democrats than passing crypto legislation with low voter salience.
That “ethics thing” refers mainly to an amendment pushed by Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) that would ban the president, vice president, members of Congress, senior officials and their families from owning, promoting, or affiliating with digital asset businesses.
The amendment, framed in his press release as a response to “rampant crypto corruption” and explicitly naming Donald Trump, was killed 13–11 on party lines in the Banking Committee and never renegotiated.
Yet the pressure continues. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) has attacked Trump’s alleged $2.3 billion crypto-related fortune and called the CFTC a “captured agency,” while Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), normally crypto-friendly, said she wants an ethics provision that prevents officials from getting rich while regulating the industry.
Two Democrats who crossed the aisle in committee, Sens. Angela Alsobrooks (MD) and Rubén Gallego (AZ), later signaled they won’t support a floor vote without stronger illicit finance and ethics language.
Strange Bedfellows: Banks, Crypto & The Prediction Markets
Dana Love, PhD draws an unusual alignment: the consumer-protection left and big banks are both attacking key parts of the bill, particularly around stablecoin yield, albeit for different reasons. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon has vowed to fight provisions on stablecoin rewards and insists issuers face “bank rules” if they act like banks.
The American Bankers Association has sent more than 8,000 letters opposing the Tillis–Alsobrooks compromise on stablecoin yields.
On the other side, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has re-endorsed the bill following Treasury Secretary Lael Brainard’s op-ed (the transcript refers to “Secretary Bessant”) and a negotiated stablecoin compromise, while crypto-aligned senators like Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) frame the bill as “common sense rules” and an American competitiveness issue.
Yet lobbying this week is focused less on whipping votes and more on securing precious floor time from Majority Leader John Thune, with industry letters directed at Thune and Minority Leader Chuck Schumer rather than undecided Democrats.
Prediction markets and institutional flows suggest growing skepticism.
Dana Love notes that Polymarket odds for passage before 2027 have slid from above 60% to around 49%, and that Galaxy’s new institutional prediction desk facilitated a $10 million event swap where hedge fund Arca gets paid if the bill fails.
Effectively a hedge against defeat, even as Galaxy’s research arm publicly talks about 75% odds and its CEO calls it “down to two or three issues.”
With only about eight Senate working weeks left before the summer recess and an AI bill, defense, and funding fights competing for floor time, the analyst’s 35% odds line up with a broader theme: insiders talk optimism in public while quietly pricing in a serious chance that ethics politics will sink the most ambitious U.S. crypto bill yet.
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People Also Ask:
It’s a comprehensive U.S. crypto bill that covers areas like market structure and stablecoins, and would significantly expand the CFTC’s role.
Several Democrats want strict bans on crypto ownership and promotion by top officials and their families. Republicans have resisted, and the analyst argues this partisan split may matter more than the technical details of the bill.
Polymarket has moved from above 60% odds of passage to below 50%, while a $10 million swap arranged by Galaxy pays out if the bill fails, suggesting serious demand for downside protection.
Whether Thune schedules floor time, whether any new ethics compromise leaks, and if additional Democrats publicly tie their support to stricter conflict-of-interest rules.
DailyCoin’s Vibe Check: Which way are you leaning towards after reading this article?





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