Coinbase Veto Derails Senate ‘CLARITY Act’; Vote Scrapped

Senate Banking Committee Delays Markup After Armstrong Pulls Support

The Senate Banking Committee has indefinitely postponed its vote on the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act (CLARITY Act) after Coinbase withdrew its endorsement late Wednesday. The reversal by the largest U.S. exchange, previously a key architect of the bill’s momentum, left the legislation dead in the water just hours before a scheduled markup.

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong did not mince words, stating the firm would rather have no bill than a bad bill. The abrupt pivot sent political shockwaves through Washington but failed to rattle the majors; Bitcoin held the $95,000–$96,000 range, while traders seemingly priced in a prolonged regulatory stalemate.

The Receipt: Three Poison Pills

Armstrong publicly flagged three provisions in the 278-page draft that made the legislation, in his view, materially worse than the current status quo.

  • Tokenized Equity Ban: The draft reportedly includes a de facto ban on tokenized equities, a sector Coinbase views as critical for future growth.
  • DeFi Surveillance: New clauses would grant government agencies broad access to user data within decentralized finance protocols, effectively mandating what critics call surveillance as a service.
  • Stablecoin Yield Prohibition: The bill prohibits stablecoin issuers from offering rewards or yield solely for holding assets, a direct threat to the yield-bearing models that sustain much of the ecosystem.

Every crypto bro cheering this bill is either on Coinbase’s payroll or can’t read… It exposes how both parties collaborate to build your digital prison.

Industry reaction via Reddit/X

Institutional Context: The Yield War

While Armstrong cited innovation and privacy, the friction over stablecoin rewards suggests a deeper turf war. Traditional banking associations have aggressively lobbied for restrictions on crypto yields, fearing a deposit flight if stablecoins can offer 4-5% APY without banking charters. Short-seller Citron Research accused Armstrong of obstructing the bill purely to protect Coinbase’s own stablecoin revenue, which faces competition from the very banks this bill seeks to empower.

Market Reaction

Despite the legislative collapse, the market shrugged. Bitcoin remained flat at $95,500, with on-chain data showing $179 million in outflows from exchanges on Friday, signaling that large holders are moving to cold storage rather than panic selling. Coinbase (COIN), however, faced immediate blowback, with analysts at BofA Securities and others reassessing the stock’s outlook amid the renewed regulatory uncertainty.

With 137 amendments left in limbo and the Senate Agriculture Committee still scheduled to mark up its own version later this month, the path to a unified regulatory framework has effectively reset to zero.

> ABOUT_THE_AUTHOR _

James Chatfield

// Senior News Editor

I lead the editorial team covering digital assets and blockchain regulation at CryptoWatchDaily. After earning a Journalism degree from The University of Sheffield, I spent a decade reporting on traditional finance before shifting focus to crypto. I value accuracy and clarity over hype. When I’m not tracking market movements, I enjoy distance running and collecting vintage sci-fi novels.

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