Negotiations surrounding the Clarity Act Cryptocurrency Act, considered one of the most important proposals to regulate the crypto market in the United States, have entered a decisive phase over the next four weeks. As lawmakers seek an agreement before the August legislative recess, social media posts have raised investors' expectations about a possible release of the bill’s final text.
During a panel held on July 16, experts from the Solana Policy Institute and Fundstrat said the bill could represent a milestone for the industry by establishing clearer rules for digital assets, defining the role of regulatory agencies, and expanding legal certainty for banks, companies, and developers that use blockchain technology.
According to the debate participants, the window for approval in the U.S. Senate is considered critical. Although a vote after the midterm elections remains a possibility, the expectation is that negotiations will advance in the coming weeks to avoid further delays.
The main impasse remains the inclusion of ethics rules involving public officials. Democratic lawmakers support stricter restrictions related to politicians’ participation in cryptocurrency projects, following questions about investments linked to President Donald Trump. Among the proposals under discussion is the possibility of requiring exchanges to remove tokens associated with officials who fail to comply with future conflict-of-interest rules.
Rumors about final text gain momentum on X
Amid the negotiations, a post from the profile @CryptoTice_, on the social network X, drew the market’s attention by stating that the final text of the CLARITY Act would be released this Saturday and that Donald Trump would personally approve the bill’s final version.
In the post, the profile also claimed that the negotiations had been concluded after months of political disputes involving banks, stablecoins, ethical issues, and oversight rules, suggesting that the bill would be ready to proceed to a vote.
The final text of the CLARITY Act will be released tonight. Politico confirms it. Trump will personally approve the final version. The negotiations are over. After months of disputes. After banks tried to sabotage the bill. After three rounds of objections. After ethical controversies. Law enforcement concerns. Battles over stablecoins. Everything resolved. The text is final. The president is approving it. The vote is coming. Senator Lummis said 4 weeks. It may not even take that long. US$ 20 trillion in capital standing still. Waiting for this exact moment. The most important cryptocurrency bill in American history. It has just reached the finish line. Position yourself before the vote.
By the time this report was published, however, this information had not been officially confirmed by the White House, the United States Congress, or any authority involved in the negotiations.
Another post, this time from trader @MerlijnTrader, presented a different reading of the situation. According to him, the main obstacle to the bill’s approval remains precisely the dispute over the ethical rules applicable to the president. The trader said that Democrats are demanding restrictions related to Trump’s cryptocurrency investments, while Republicans resist the inclusion of these measures, making it more difficult to secure the votes needed for approval.
Market closely follows the vote
Despite the uncertainty, experts continue to assess that the CLARITY Act has significant chances of advancing in the Senate. During the panel, estimates presented by representatives of the Solana Policy Institute and Fundstrat ranged between 50% and 70% probability of approval, reflecting a scenario of moderate optimism, but still surrounded by political negotiations.
Expectations surrounding the legislation remain high because the approval of the CLARITY Act could establish a regulatory framework for the cryptocurrency sector in the United States, offering greater predictability for institutional investors and companies. Until there is an official announcement, however, any information about the release of the final text or a possible presidential signature should be treated with caution.


