- The Digital Chamber sent a letter urging the Senate Banking Committee to move forward with tokenization of the CLARITY Act as soon as possible.
- The group said more than 270 days have passed since the House approved the bill, and warned that the legislative window is narrowing.
Pressure is building again around The law of claritythis time from one of the major trade groups in the cryptocurrency industry.
The digital room sent a letter Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott and Ranking Member Elizabeth WarrenHe urged the committee to move forward with coding digital asset market structure legislation “as soon as the calendar allows.” The letter, signed by CEO Cody Carbone, views the delay not as a simple procedural slowdown, but as a growing risk to the bill’s chances in the current Congress.
The industry is pressing the Senate to act
The basic argument in the letter is simple enough. The House passed the Clarity Act with what the group described as strong bipartisan support more than 270 days ago, and lawmakers are now halfway through the 119th Congress. That leaves less room for protracted negotiations if the Senate wants to move the legislation to its next stage, the Digital Chamber said.
The letter also took a conciliatory tone towards the committee’s work so far. The group said it appreciated the committee’s extensive efforts and willingness to engage with industry stakeholders. But the basic push was clear and unambiguous. The Chamber believes that the time allocated for discussions alone is running out.
Signs are framed as the next practical step
Carbone’s letter said that meaningful and extensive negotiations had already taken place between committee members, staff and external stakeholders. For this reason, the organization said that coding is now the clearest way to move forward with the legislation.
The chamber also linked the issue to a broader political message. She said moving the bill forward would provide needed clarity to the more than 70 million Americans she claims have embraced digital assets, while strengthening American leadership in responsible innovation and next-generation financial technology.
This wording is important. Payment is no longer framed as a demand only from the cryptocurrency sector. It is presented as part of a broader debate about competitiveness, regulatory clarity and whether Congress is prepared to act before the calendar decides.





