(P1) The Senate's updated stablecoin bill, the CLARITY Act, is facing more than 100 proposed amendments ahead of a key vote, with several new provisions targeting decentralized finance developers and creating potential criminal liability for software code.
(P2) "The bill includes crucial provisions for developers," an industry group noted, viewing the inclusion of the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act (BRCA) as a significant win for the crypto sector and aligning with Chair Tim Scott’s view of collaborative progress.
(P3) The updated draft, released before a May 14, 2026, markup session, incorporates the BRCA to exempt non-custodial developers from money transmitter laws. However, other amendments from Democrats, such as one from Senator Catherine Cortez Masto, seek to create a "safe harbor" from criminal liability, highlighting the contentious debate. Another from Senator Chris Van Hollen aims to bar senior government officials and their families from crypto ownership.
(P4) At stake is the future of the $240 billion stablecoin market and DeFi innovation in the United States. If restrictive amendments pass, it could stifle development and push projects overseas, while the failure to pass any bill would leave the industry under a cloud of regulatory uncertainty, impacting DeFi protocols like Aave, which recently secured $25 million in funding.
DeFi at a Crossroads: BRCA vs. Criminal Liability
The most significant addition to the Senate draft is the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act (BRCA). This provision clarifies that non-custodial software developers and service providers are not money transmitters, a move that would significantly de-risk development on public blockchains within the U.S. This directly addresses a major fear in the developer community: being held liable for how others use open-source code.
However, this protection is being debated. While the BRCA provides a broad exemption, an amendment from Senator Catherine Cortez Masto proposes a more specific "safe harbor from criminal liability for not registering as a money transmitter." The subtle difference in language points to the ongoing battle to define the lines of responsibility in a decentralized ecosystem.
The Stablecoin Reward Debate and the "404 Compromise"
A central point of contention remains the treatment of rewards paid to stablecoin holders. A "404 compromise" in the bill permits rewards only when they are not equivalent to interest from a bank deposit. This language, pushed by Senators Elizabeth Warren and Thom Tillis, aims to prevent stablecoin issuers from competing directly with traditional banks.
This is a commercially sensitive issue that caused a previous markup session in January 2026 to collapse after Coinbase withdrew its support. For issuers, the ability to share reserve interest with users is a powerful tool for growth. For banks, it represents a potential threat to their deposit base, a concern Moody's has assessed as low but which regulators are keen to structurally contain.
Path to Law Remains Uncertain
The Senate bill must be reconciled with the House's version of the CLARITY Act, which passed in the summer of 2025 and notably lacks the BRCA developer protections. Achieving a unified bill requires a 60-vote majority in the Senate, a high bar for the fragile bipartisan coalition. Democrats have also raised concerns over the bill's omission of language addressing the reported $1.4 billion in crypto gains by former President Trump's family, using it as a potential bargaining chip for broader support. Lawmakers are aiming to get a final bill to the president's desk by Thanksgiving 2026.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.