U.S. Senator Cynthia Lummis defended the CLARITY Act for the digital asset market, countering criticism from Senator Elizabeth Warren that the bill could weaken the fight against illicit financing. In the debate over X, Warren claimed that the bill could create new vulnerabilities that criminal organizations and hostile foreign actors could use to move funds.
The topic of illegal financing was at the center of the discussion
Lummis rejected these allegations and said that the bill contains more than 16 protection articles to prevent financial crimes and strengthen supervision in the digital asset sector. The Republican senator representing Wyoming argued that criticism should be made directly through the text of the bill, not through general opposition to the cryptocurrency industry.
The CLARITY Act contains more than 16 safeguards against illegal financing, it is not clear.
Lummis drew attention to some items in particular. Accordingly, section 201 applies the Bank Secrecy Act and anti-money laundering obligations to digital asset activities. Section 303 introduces new sanctions regulations regarding Iran, while Section 305 gives cryptocurrency exchanges the authority to freeze funds linked to illegal activities.
Mini dictionary: The Bank Secrecy Act is known as one of the main regulations in the USA that imposes the obligation on financial institutions to monitor and report suspicious transactions. AML covers identity verification, transaction tracking and notification rules to prevent money laundering.
The bill also determines the limits of the audit authority.
CLARITY Act stands out as one of the most important cryptocurrency regulations being discussed in the US Congress. The bill aims to create a clearer regulatory framework by clarifying which institution will oversee different types of digital assets. Cynthia Lummis is among the names in the US Senate known for her cryptocurrency-friendly approach.
According to the proposal, digital commodities such as Bitcoin and Ethereum are expected to come under the control of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Tokens that qualify as investment contracts are planned to remain under the jurisdiction of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
| Entity type | Projected controller |
|---|---|
| digital commodities | CFTC |
| Tokens that are considered investment contracts | SEC |
While support continues, criticism also continues
The bill also includes legal safeguards for the protection of customer assets during bankruptcy processes, tokenization, decentralized finance applications and software manufacturers developing blockchain code. Lummis thinks this framework will reduce regulatory uncertainty, spur innovation and help the U.S. remain competitive as other regions develop new rules.
Elizabeth Warren argues the bill could create loopholes that could be exploited by criminals and sanctioned parties.
However, although the bill has bipartisan support, it faces criticism from some Democratic senators and banking circles. Critics argue that money laundering and terrorist financing risks, particularly those associated with decentralized finance platforms, some custody services and uncustodial crypto wallets, have not been fully addressed.
The CLARITY Act is expected to remain one of the important topics on the Senate agenda before Congress enters the August recess. The outcome of the possible general assembly vote could impact how the future of cryptocurrency regulation in the US balances innovation with financial crime crackdowns.


