A bipartisan request from Congress to fill four vacant seats at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission highlights the growing urgency to establish a stable regulatory framework for the $3 trillion digital asset market.
A bipartisan request from Congress to fill four vacant seats at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission highlights the growing urgency to establish a stable regulatory framework for the $3 trillion digital asset market.

(P1) Bipartisan leaders of the U.S. House Agriculture Committee sent a formal request to President Donald Trump on Friday to nominate four new commissioners to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, arguing the agency’s current one-man leadership structure is inadequate for overseeing the crypto market.
(P2) "The public, the markets and the agency itself will be best served by a full five-member commission," Chairman Glenn “GT” Thompson (R-PA) and Rep. Angie Craig (D-MN) wrote in the letter. "This will result in better regulations, more durable rules, and more sensitivity to the divergent views of key derivatives market stakeholders."
(P3) The request comes as the Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act, which grants the CFTC significant new authority over digital commodity markets, advances through the Senate. The agency is currently operating under its sole commissioner, Michael Selig, who has stated he has no intention of slowing down rulemaking. This has raised concerns among lawmakers, with Senator Amy Klobuchar proposing an amendment that would prevent the CLARITY Act from taking effect until at least four commissioners are confirmed.
(P4) With the CLARITY Act's passage hanging in the balance, the commission's vacancies have become a critical issue. The absence of a full, bipartisan board threatens to undermine the legitimacy and durability of any new crypto rules, potentially leaving a $3 trillion global industry operating under a framework established by a single regulator that could be undone by a future administration.
The legislative push has drawn widespread commentary from the crypto industry, with most leaders viewing the CLARITY Act as a crucial step forward. Proponents argue it will finally establish the regulatory predictability needed for broader adoption.
“The bipartisan advancement of the CLARITY Act out of Committee puts the United States back in the global race for digital assets leadership,” said Ji Hun Kim, CEO of the Crypto Council for Innovation. He noted the bill would bring a significant portion of the $3 trillion global digital asset market, 88% of which is currently offshore, under U.S. rules.
This sentiment is echoed by venture capitalists. “Greater regulatory clarity reduces certain regulatory risk,” said Emily Goodman, a partner at FS Vector. “VCs can, as a result, have more confidence in digital asset business models and their ability to scale.”
The potential impact on payments and merchant adoption is another key focus. Ivan Patriki, co-founder of QuantMap, said the act gives businesses a "clearer rulebook," lowering the risk for merchants who have been hesitant to accept crypto due to legal uncertainty.
The situation at the CFTC is highly unusual. The Trump administration has pursued a strategy of removing Democrats from regulatory boards, but the resulting single-member commission at a key market regulator has created a bottleneck.
Speaking at the Consensus 2026 conference, Chairman Selig defended his position. "Our statute does not require a quorum, which means that I'm able to operate as chairman of the agency and also vote on behalf of the commission," he said. "In the meantime, we can’t slow down."
However, the letter from Thompson and Craig directly challenges this approach, especially in the context of the new powers the CLARITY Act would bestow. As the legislative window narrows ahead of midterm elections, the pressure to resolve the commission's leadership void is intensifying, with the future of U.S. crypto regulation at stake.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.