Why Can Coinbase Halt a CLARITY Act Vote with Just One Sentence?
Original Title: The Biggest U.S. Crypto Company Asserts Its Power in Washington
Original Author: David Yaffe-Bellany, The New York Times
Translation: Peggy, BlockBeats
Editor's Note: The Clarity Act, which was about to enter a critical vote, was urgently halted due to Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong's public opposition. The controversy centered around the stablecoin interest payment restriction and SEC's jurisdiction. In fact, with the regulatory shift since the Trump administration, the crypto industry has transitioned from being the "regulated" to the "rule negotiator." This intervention not only altered the voting process but also exposed the true interest game behind crypto legislation.
Below is the original text:

A cryptocurrency bill vote scheduled for Thursday was canceled after Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong publicly spoke out against the bill on Wednesday evening. Image Source: The New York Times
After months of negotiations, a significant cryptocurrency bill was scheduled to enter the Senate committee's voting phase on Thursday, a critical step in the legislative process.
However, the head of the largest U.S. crypto company, Coinbase, voiced concerns on social media. Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong wrote on X Wednesday night, "Unfortunately, Coinbase cannot support the current version of the bill. This version would be significantly worse than the current regulatory status quo. We would rather have no bill than a bad bill."
Hours later, the Senate vote was canceled.
Typically, the trajectory of a contentious legislative vote depends on a few key moderate lawmakers amid partisan tug-of-war. But the shift in the fate of this milestone crypto bill this week highlights the immense influence Coinbase now holds in Washington—a position the crypto industry has rapidly ascended to during the Trump presidency.
Over the past few months, congressional staff have been advancing the Clarity Act's drafting. This nearly 300-page bill aims to establish a regulatory framework for almost every crucial aspect of the crypto industry, with many rules co-developed and promoted by industry participants. However, at the eleventh hour, Armstrong expressed opposition to a particular proposed wording, believing it could put one of Coinbase's products at risk of being banned; he also stated that the bill would give too much power to the U.S.' primary financial regulator, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
Coinbase's decisive move this time is the result of the company's years-long operation of political influence in Washington. As a nearly $700 billion publicly traded company, Coinbase has funded a political action committee (PAC) network that, in 2024, poured over $1.3 billion into influencing congressional elections to support more pro-crypto industry lawmakers.
This intense wave of political contributions to Congress sends a clear message: anyone opposing the crypto industry could become a target.
Today, top industry companies have enough leverage to advance their own interests. Todd Phillips, a finance expert at Georgia State University, stated, "Coinbase played this move very nicely." A Coinbase spokesperson declined to comment on this.
Founded in 2012, Coinbase provides users with a platform to buy, sell, and store cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum. Anyone can log in to their application and make a purchase with a few clicks.
However, not long ago, this company faced a more challenging environment in Washington. In 2023, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) sued Coinbase, alleging that it operated as an "unregistered exchange," as part of the Biden administration's broader crackdown on the crypto industry. Armstrong, a co-founder of Coinbase, criticized the SEC's "enforcement-led regulation" approach and called for clearer crypto regulatory rules.
Trump's election as president in 2024 changed the landscape entirely. Shortly before taking office, Trump and his sons launched a crypto venture, with Trump publicly stating his intention to make the U.S. the "global capital of crypto."
Within weeks of Trump taking office, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) dropped its lawsuit against Coinbase and other crypto companies. Subsequently, the crypto industry pushed for legislation to enshrine this regulatory "rollback" into law, preventing harsh future government crackdowns on the crypto industry.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) dropped its lawsuit against Coinbase shortly after Trump's inauguration last year. Image Source: The New York Times
In July of this year, with government backing, the House passed its version of the "Clarity Act," largely adopting the crypto industry's proposed new regulatory framework. This act will make it easier for companies like Coinbase to argue that digital currencies are not securities, thus avoiding federal securities regulations aimed at protecting investors and markets.
However, the bill faced resistance in the Senate. Last fall, Senate Democrats proposed rules to tightly regulate Decentralized Finance (DeFi), a branch of the crypto space, sparking strong industry backlash.
Meanwhile, banking industry lobbying groups pushed to include a provision in the bill banning cryptocurrency exchanges like Coinbase from paying interest to stablecoin holders. Stablecoins are a type of digital currency designed to maintain a price of 1 USD. The banking industry believes that such "interest-bearing products" offered by crypto exchanges would undermine traditional banking as they compete with traditional deposit accounts.
This issue quickly became a key concern for Coinbase. The potential ban on interest payments could impact one of its revenue streams. Coinbase's head of policy, Kara Calvert, stated, "Competition is about offering these kinds of incentive programs, and that's critical."
The latest version of the "Clarity Act" draft bill in the Senate was released close to midnight on Monday. Congressional staff and crypto industry executives immediately began reviewing the text, rushing to complete the reading before the Senate committee meeting scheduled for Thursday. This meeting, known as a "markup," would provide senators with an opportunity to propose amendments. As the markup approached, despite other crypto industry executives expressing support for the bill on social media, Armstrong announced he would withdraw his support.
On Wednesday night, Senator Tim Scott, a Republican from South Carolina and chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, announced that the markup would be postponed, with the specific timing yet to be determined. In his statement, he said, "All parties continue to communicate in good faith. Our goal is to establish clear 'rules of the road' that protect consumers, enhance national security, and ensure the future of finance is built in America."
You may also like

Tiger Research: What AI services do cryptocurrency companies offer?

The war not only drives up oil prices but also causes Circle's stock price to soar

When agents become consumers, who will rewrite the underlying logic of internet commerce?

AI Agents in Action Summit: March 31, Hong Kong Cyberport, focusing on the deep waters of AI implementation

29 Days In, What Are America’s Options on Iran?

Flash Crash Down 97%+ with Ongoing Unlocking, WLD Completes $65 Million Off-chain Funding: Who Is Still Buying?

Bitcoin for Real Estate? Fannie Mae Teams Up with Coinbase to Launch Crypto Mortgage

Tether Hires Big Four Auditor, USDT Enters First Attestation Phase

Google AI Paper Destroys $900B Storage Stock, Accused of Faking Experiment

Evaporate $2 Trillion, U.S. Stocks See Worst Start in 4 Years, Why is the Market Bearish?

The speed at which AI discovers vulnerabilities has surpassed the speed at which it patches vulnerabilities.
AI Crypto Trading Bot Explained: Aurora's Multi-Factor Strategy in WEEX Hackathon
Aurora demonstrates how structured, multi-agent AI Trading systems can deliver more adaptive and resilient performance in the WEEX AI Trading Hackathon.

Cyber Taoist Fortune Teller: Fake Taoist, AI Fortune Telling, and Northeastern Metaphysics History

Bloomberg: Stablecoin Payments Emerge as Crypto VC's Newest Favorite Thing

BeatSwap is evolving towards a full-stack Web3 infrastructure, covering the entire lifecycle of IP rights.
BeatSwap, a global Web3 Intellectual Property (IP) infrastructure project, is attempting to overcome the current fragmentation limitations of the Web3 ecosystem, building a full-stack system that covers the entire lifecycle of IP rights.
Currently, most Web3 projects are still in the stage of functional fragmentation, often focusing only on a single aspect, such as IP asset tokenization, transaction functionality, or a simple incentive model. This structural dispersion has become a key bottleneck hindering the industry's scale application.
BeatSwap's approach is more integrated, integrating multiple core modules into the same system, including:
· IP authentication and on-chain registration
· Authorization-based revenue sharing mechanism
· User-engagement-driven incentive system
· Transaction and liquidity infrastructure
Through the above integration, the platform builds an end-to-end closed-loop path, allowing IP rights to complete a full cycle of "creation, use, and monetization" within the same ecosystem.
BeatSwap is not limited to existing crypto users but is attempting to take the global music industry as a starting point, actively creating new market demand. Its core strategies include:
Exploring and incubating music creators (Artist discovery)
Building a fan community
Igniting IP-centric content consumption demand
The current global music industry is valued at around $260 billion, with over 2 billion digital music users. This means that the potential market corresponding to the tokenization and financialization of IP far exceeds the traditional crypto user base.
In this context, BeatSwap positions itself at the intersection of "real-world content demand" and "on-chain infrastructure," attempting to bridge the structural gap between content production and financial flow.
BeatSwap's upcoming core product "Space" is scheduled to launch in the second quarter of 2026. This product is defined as the SocialFi layer in the ecosystem, aiming to directly connect creators with users and achieve deep integration with other platform modules.
Key designs include:
A fan-centric interactive mechanism
Exposure and distribution logic based on $BTX staking
User paths connected to DeFi and liquidity structures
Thus, a complete user behavior loop is formed within the platform: Discovery → Participation → Consumption → Rewards → Trading
$BTX is designed to be a core utility asset within the ecosystem, rather than just a simple incentive token, with its value directly tied to platform activity and IP use cases.
Main features include:
· Yield distribution based on on-chain authorized actions
· Value reflection based on IP usage and user engagement dynamics
· Support for staking and DeFi participation mechanisms
· Value growth driven by ecosystem expansion
With the increased frequency of IP use, the utility and value support of $BTX will enhance simultaneously, helping alleviate the "disconnect between value and utility" issue present in traditional Web3 token models to some extent.
Currently, $BTX has been listed on several mainstream exchanges, including:
Binance Alpha
Gate
MEXC
OKX Boost
As the launch of "Space" approaches, BeatSwap is actively pursuing more exchange listings to further enhance liquidity and global accessibility, laying a foundation for future market expansion.
BeatSwap's goal is no longer limited to the traditional Web3 narrative but aims to target over 2 billion digital music users and a trillion KRW-scale content market.
By integrating content creators, users, capital, and liquidity into a blockchain framework centered around IP rights, BeatSwap is striving to build a next-generation infrastructure focused on "IP tokenization."
BeatSwap integrates IP authentication, authorization distribution, incentive mechanism, transaction system, and market construction to establish a unified structure that bridges the full lifecycle path of IP rights.
With the launch of the Q2 2026 "Space," the project is expected to become a key infrastructure connecting content and finance in the IP-RWA (Real World Assets) track.

Mag 7 Evaporates $2 Trillion | Rewire News Morning Edition

Losing $19K per Coin Mined, Bitcoin Mining Firms Collective AI Defection

