Coinbase’s withdrawal from the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act effort is leading to a degree of political backlash in Washington, and the crypto regulation billCoinbase’s withdrawal from the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act effort is leading to a degree of political backlash in Washington, and the crypto regulation bill

Coinbase Pushback Delays Crypto Market Structure Bill in Senate

3 min read
  • Coinbase’s Brian Armstrong pulled support for the CLARITY Act, arguing the draft harms DeFi and stablecoin rewards.
  • The White House reacted sharply, warning the crypto industry not to overplay its influence in Washington.
  • The Senate crypto market structure bill now faces delays as lawmakers scramble to rebuild bipartisan support.

Coinbase’s withdrawal from the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act effort is leading to a degree of political backlash in Washington, and the crypto regulation bill currently deemed to have the most potential is losing steam. It is indicative of how easy it is for crypto regulation wins to slip through legislators’ fingers, even under a more friendly U.S. administration.

According to Bloomberg, a week after Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong helped stall sweeping crypto legislation in the Senate, White House crypto adviser Patrick Witt publicly criticized the move and warned the industry not to take its influence for granted.

Armstrong had argued that lawmakers should not rush a flawed bill, saying no bill would be better than a bad one. However, the White House viewed the reversal as disruptive, especially since the administration had treated the CLARITY Act as a signature step toward making the U.S. a global leader in digital assets.

Why Coinbase withdrew support

Coinbase expressed concerns that the draft would place restrictions on activities involving decentralized finance and tokenized equities, as well as reward structures for stablecoins that attract users to them. Armstrong also warned that the bill could reshape the regulatory balance by giving the Securities and Exchange Commission more influence while limiting the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s ability to oversee crypto markets.

Those objections landed at a sensitive moment. Lawmakers already faced heavy lobbying pressure from banks and traditional finance groups, especially on stablecoin yield. Banking interests have argued that stablecoin rewards could pull deposits away from savings accounts, forcing lawmakers to rethink what “digital dollars” should legally allow.

White House frustration adds a new layer of risk

The White House response signals that the fight now extends beyond committees and lobbyists. Witt’s message suggests the administration wants unity across major industry players, especially on a bill it frames as essential to long-term U.S. crypto competitiveness.

His warning also carried a political edge: he implied a future Democratic-led rewrite could impose tougher restrictions if today’s bill fails. That argument reflects a growing view in Washington that crypto should lock in regulatory clarity while it still has momentum.

Senate timeline grows uncertain

The broader concern now centers on timing. Senators have aimed to push forward market structure rules that clearly define when assets fall under the SEC versus the CFTC. Coinbase’s pullback complicates the effort because lawmakers lose one of the sector’s biggest and most influential supporters.

At the same time, Armstrong signaled he still sees a path forward and expects negotiation to continue, even if lawmakers need more time to bridge disagreements.

For the crypto sector, this episode delivers a clear message: political support exists, but it comes with conditions. If leading firms fracture the coalition, Washington may slow down or rewrite the rules in less crypto-friendly ways.

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