The clarity Act just got a major headline. President Donald Trump canceled a planned signing ceremony on June 24 for Congress’s bipartisan housing affordability bill. The bill carries a four-year Federal Reserve CBDC (central bank digital currency) ban extending to December 31, 2030. Announcing via Truth Social that the event is
“hereby canceled until such time as we pass the desperately needed SAVE America Act, which I consider to be a National Emergency.”
The housing bill had cleared the Senate on an 85–5 vote, a margin sufficient to override a presidential veto, though doing so would require Republican allies to break publicly with the president.
This is not simply a standoff over a housing bill. It is a structural compression event for the crypto industry’s flagship legislative priority, with the Senate calendar carrying roughly five weeks before the summer recess and the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act still requiring a floor vote.
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Clarity Act News: What the SAVE America Blockade Actually Costs the Industry
The Clarity Act, the market structure bill defining SEC versus CFTC jurisdiction over digital assets and classifying Bitcoin and Ethereum as digital commodities, passed the House 294–134 during the July 2025 legislative sprint that crypto advocates labeled “Crypto Week.”
It has since stalled in the Senate over an ethics provision targeting officials with direct crypto exposure linked to Trump-family ventures, as well as revised tax and broker-reporting language that industry groups argued would undercut the bill’s original pro-market framework.
Those intra-chamber negotiations have consumed months of calendar time without resolution, and the Senate’s August recess deadline has been a recurring pressure point in Clarity Act floor vote discussions.
Trump cancelled a signing ceremony for a bipartisan housing bill carrying a four-year CBDC prohibition, holding it hostage to an unrelated elections measure and now $BTC are $ETH are down while the Senate’s window for the Clarity Act shrinks by the day.
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— Ali Agha (@iamAliAgha) June 24, 2026
The SAVE America Act adds a parallel drag. The bill, which would require proof of citizenship and voter identification at the federal level, has not moved through the Senate. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson told reporters the legislation “has been stuck in the Senate” and indicated Republican leadership is considering folding it into a budget vehicle.
Trump had earlier this year signaled he would block unrelated legislation until the SAVE America Act reached his desk, a threat that, applied consistently, functions as a de facto sequencing gate on all other priorities, including crypto legislation.
TD Cowen policy analyst Jaret Seiberg addressed the SAVE America Act’s viability directly in a June 24 research note, stating: “There is no path for the SAVE Act becoming law. Senate GOP would need to eliminate the filibuster, a step they already have rejected. Even absent the filibuster, it is not clear the bill has the support of 50 senators, given worries about having to prove citizenship.” A cloture vote requiring 60 senators to advance the bill past a procedural challenge is a threshold that Republican leadership has already declined to pursue.
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CBDC Ban: The Separate Legislative Track and Trump’s Prior Position
Trump signed an executive order in 2025 prohibiting U.S. government moves toward a CBDC, arguing it would “threaten the stability of the financial system, individual privacy, and the sovereignty of the United States.”
The housing bill’s statutory ban was a more durable vehicle for the same policy objective, and the crypto industry’s opposition to a retail CBDC has consistently centered on financial surveillance risk.
House Republicans had also folded CBDC-ban language into the Clarity Act itself as a procedural backstop, signaling they treat statutory CBDC limits as a non-negotiable objective regardless of which vehicle carries them.
Donald Trump
Before canceling the signing, Trump posted that the housing bill is of “minor importance compared to lower interest rates” and criticized Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren’s role in the legislation, framing that positions the bill’s bipartisan authorship as a liability rather than a marker of durability.
The constitutional 10-day window for presidential signature or veto begins once a bill formally lands on the president’s desk, meaning the clock has not yet started on a potential override scenario.
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Digital Asset Market Structure: The Forward Scenario
We suspect the most likely near-term outcome is a Senate attempt to decouple the Clarity Act from the SAVE America Act sequencing demand by attaching digital asset market structure language to an appropriations or must-pass budget vehicle before the recess, a path Johnson’s own comments about the SAVE Act suggest is already under internal discussion.
Whether the ethics and tax revisions that stalled Senate negotiations get resolved in that compressed window is the operative variable, and the ethics talks tied to Trump’s crypto holdings remain the most contested fault line in those negotiations.
The analytical question is no longer whether the Clarity Act has political support; it is whether five weeks of Senate floor time is enough to close an ethics and tax dispute that has persisted for months, while leadership simultaneously navigates a presidential veto threat on an unrelated housing bill with veto-proof margins it may or may not exercise.
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Neil is a professional cryptocurrency content writer with years of experience. He has written for various cryptocurrency websites to report on breaking news, and been hired by all sorts of cryptocurrency projects, to create content that would increase their exposure and attract more potential investors.












