Senator Cynthia Lummis says bipartisan amendments to the CLARITY Act will deliver the strongest DeFi protections ever written into federal law, pushing back against critics who warn the bill still leaves developers exposed to money transmitter liability.
Lummis announced that weeks of bipartisan negotiation produced changes to Title 3 of the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, the section governing decentralized finance. The Senate Banking Committee is expected to mark up the bill in April 2026, with Lummis insisting the legislation must be completed by year-end.
What the CLARITY Act Actually Proposes for DeFi
The bill's central DeFi mechanism sits in Title 3, Section 604, which incorporates the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act (BRCA). The BRCA exempts non-custodial software providers and non-controlling developers from Bank Secrecy Act KYC obligations. It also prevents these actors from being classified as financial institutions under federal law.
In practical terms, a developer who writes and deploys a DeFi protocol but does not take custody of user funds would not face the same compliance burden as a bank or money services business. The distinction hinges on custody: those who control user assets face regulatory obligations, while those who build permissionless tools do not.
This framework arrives against the backdrop of the Tornado Cash case. Co-founder Roman Storm was convicted in August 2025 for operating an unlicensed money transmitting business, a verdict that sent a chill through the DeFi developer community. The BRCA's incorporation into the CLARITY Act is a direct legislative response to the uncertainty that conviction created, as competing crypto regulatory proposals continue working through Congress.
The bill also draws lines between CFTC and SEC jurisdiction over digital assets, classifying sufficiently decentralized tokens as commodities rather than securities. How the legislation defines "decentralized" will determine which DeFi activities gain legal clarity and which remain in gray areas.
Supporters Praise the Framework, but Critics Flag Gaps
"We have worked on a bipartisan basis for the last few weeks to make changes to Title 3 that make this bill the strongest protection for DeFi and developers ever enacted."
Senator Cynthia Lummis
Lummis dismissed concerns about developer protection gaps as "FUD," framing the bipartisan amendments as a definitive resolution to the liability questions raised by the Roman Storm case. The stablecoin yield compromise reached by Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks further cleared a legislative path for the broader bill to advance.
Not everyone is convinced. Crypto lawyer Jake Chervinsky raised concern that Title 3's money transmitter definitions could still expose non-custodial DeFi developers to liability, even with the BRCA carve-out. The worry centers on whether the bill's language is precise enough to survive aggressive enforcement interpretations.
Chervinsky has also noted on X that Congressional hearings on the CLARITY Act have featured more political posturing than substantive critique, comparing the anti-crypto faction's dismissals to the predictable stages of resistance to new technology.
The tension is not abstract. Protocols like decentralized exchanges, lending platforms, and prediction markets attracting institutional capital would need to determine whether their governance structures qualify for the non-custodial exemption. Algorithmic stablecoins and protocols with upgradeable smart contracts remain particularly ambiguous under the current draft.
According to unconfirmed reports, the specific text of the bipartisan Title 3 amendments has not been publicly released. Lummis confirmed changes were made, but the draft language remains unpublished, leaving critics unable to evaluate the exact protections being promised.
What CLARITY's DeFi Provisions Could Mean for the Broader Market
The stakes are substantial. Total DeFi value locked across all chains stands at approximately $151.4 billion, with Ethereum alone accounting for over $106.2 billion, more than 70% of the total.
Total DeFi TVL — All Chains
$151.4B
Ethereum alone accounts for ~$106.2B (>70% of total). Source: DeFiLlama
If the bill passes with strong developer protections intact, the bull case is straightforward: clearer rules could draw DeFi development and institutional capital back onshore. U.S.-based teams that relocated to avoid enforcement risk, particularly after the Storm conviction, would have a legal framework to build under. Institutional players exploring DeFi strategies, including firms like Morgan Stanley that have already entered digital asset products, could expand into on-chain protocols with reduced compliance uncertainty.
The bear case is equally concrete. If the bill stalls in committee, gets amended to weaken the BRCA exemption, or fails to pass before year-end, the current enforcement-driven regulatory environment persists. Developers remain exposed to money transmitter charges, and the Roman Storm precedent continues to define the legal landscape for anyone building non-custodial tools.
The April markup will be the first concrete test of whether the bipartisan support Lummis describes can survive committee scrutiny. Until the amended text is public, the DeFi community is weighing a promise against a precedent.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.