On April 29, 2026, the U.S. Senate Banking Committee approved the nomination of Kevin Warsh as the next Federal Reserve Chair by a party-line vote of 13 to 11. Senator Elizabeth Warren described this as the first time in the committee’s history that a Fed Chair nomination advanced strictly along party lines.
Meanwhile, the Digital Asset Market Transparency Act—after nearly a year of review—has entered a critical legislative window. Senator Lummis has set a committee review target for May, but disputes over stablecoin yield distribution and ethics provisions have kept the bill stalled at the committee level. According to prediction market Polymarket, the odds of the bill passing in 2026 have sharply declined from previous highs to just 45%.
The simultaneous progression of these two major variables is no coincidence. As the institution responsible for both monetary policy and financial regulation, the Federal Reserve’s leadership transition will directly shape the underlying logic of crypto asset regulation and the institutional foundation for America’s global digital asset competitiveness.
Key Milestones: From White House Nomination to Committee Vote
Every step in Warsh’s nomination process has been closely intertwined with the legal maneuvering over Powell’s tenure. The following are the key milestones:
| Date | Key Event |
|---|---|
| January 30, 2026 | Trump formally announces Kevin Warsh as his pick for the next Fed Chair |
| Early March 2026 | The White House officially submits Warsh’s nomination to the Senate |
| April 14, 2026 | Warsh’s financial disclosure is released, showing family assets exceeding $100 million, including investments in multiple crypto projects |
| April 16, 2026 | Trump publicly threatens to remove Powell if he does not step down on time |
| April 21–22, 2026 | Warsh appears before the Senate Banking Committee for confirmation hearings |
| April 26, 2026 | Senator Tillis lifts his hold on Warsh’s confirmation process |
| April 29, 2026 | Senate Banking Committee approves Warsh’s nomination by a 13:11 vote |
| April 29, 2026 | Powell presides over his final FOMC meeting as Chair |
| From May 11, 2026 | The full Senate may vote on Warsh’s nomination as early as this date |
| May 15, 2026 | Powell’s term as Fed Chair officially ends |
The CLARITY Act’s legislative path has shifted from optimism to stalemate:
In July 2025, the House passed the bill with bipartisan support, 294 to 134. On January 9, 2026, Senate Banking Committee Chair Tim Scott announced a committee review scheduled for January 15. However, as of late April, a formal review had yet to take place. Alex Thorn, Head of Research at Galaxy Digital, estimates the bill’s chances of passing in 2026 at 50% or even lower.
Party-Line Voting Fractures and Plummeting Probability Curves
The Structural Significance of the Warsh Nomination Vote
The 13-to-11 party-line vote stands in stark contrast to the overwhelming 22-to-1 support Powell received in his 2017 nomination. This shift highlights how the selection of the Fed Chair has evolved from a technocratic appointment to a highly politicized contest.
With Republicans holding only a slim majority in the Senate, the distribution of votes in the full chamber will be a key indicator of the policy space available going forward. At the post-FOMC meeting on April 29, Powell confirmed that he would remain on the Fed’s Board of Governors after stepping down as Chair. This means that even if Warsh assumes the Chairmanship, there will still be room for competing policy perspectives within the Fed.
Dramatic Swings in CLARITY Act Prediction Odds
On Polymarket, the CLARITY Act’s predicted probability of passage has fluctuated wildly, reflecting market sentiment:
| Date | Probability of Passage | Key Factors |
|---|---|---|
| February 20, 2026 | ~90% | Early optimism |
| February 25, 2026 | ~42% | Public split between banking and crypto sectors |
| March 4, 2026 | 72% | Trump publicly pushes for the bill |
| March 21, 2026 | 71% | Market remains optimistic |
| April 15, 2026 | 59% | Cumulative trading volume reaches $528,000 |
| Late April 2026 | 45% | Tillis ethics clause controversy erupts |
The drop from 90% to 45% shows that a single variable—especially non-technical disputes like ethics clauses—can have a profound impact on the entire legislative process.
Core Roadblocks in the Legislative Stalemate
The CLARITY Act currently faces three main obstacles:
First, the stalemate over stablecoin yield distribution. The preliminary compromise between Tillis and Alsobrooks aims to ban passive yield but allow incentives for active participation, though final language has yet to be released.
Second, the political complexity of the ethics clause. Tillis has insisted that the bill must include language restricting White House officials’ involvement in digital asset interests.
Third, a narrowing legislative window. With the August recess and November midterms approaching, the available legislative calendar is shrinking rapidly. As Stephen Aschettino of Fox Rothschild LLP notes, if the bill doesn’t move soon, "there’s a high likelihood it won’t pass at all this year."
Three-Way Spectrum: Support, Opposition, and Industry Anxiety
Diverging Views on the Warsh Nomination
Supporters emphasize Warsh’s experience in the crypto sector and his pragmatic policy approach. Senate Banking Committee Chair Tim Scott called Warsh "battle-tested" and stressed the need to break with policy inertia. Crypto industry figures believe Warsh’s understanding of digital assets surpasses any previous Fed Chair nominee, and his comments about integrating digital assets into the regulated banking system are seen as a signal of imminent policy openness.
Opponents focus on two main issues: procedural legitimacy—Warren called it an "illegal attempt to seize control of the Fed"—and conflicts of interest. Warsh’s disclosed crypto holdings span more than a dozen blockchain protocols, including dYdX, Solana, Optimism, Compound, and Polymarket. Warren raised concerns that he might grant special treatment to "politically connected crypto companies."
Divisions Over the CLARITY Act
The crypto industry is pushing hard for the bill. Over 120 crypto organizations have sent a joint letter to the Senate Banking Committee, urging a review by the end of May and warning that legislative inaction will lead to a return to "regulation by enforcement."
Banking sector stakeholders are focused on the potential impact of stablecoin yield provisions on traditional deposit models and advocate for a more cautious approach.
There are also internal political divisions. Lummis is pushing for a May review, arguing the bill will create a "safe harbor" for developers and node operators. Tillis, however, insists the ethics clause is non-negotiable and has stated that the bill will not be rushed "without considering all perspectives."
Triple Transmission Chains: Market Structure, Stablecoin Sector, and DeFi Ecosystem
Direct Impact on Market Structure
Warsh and Powell have distinctly different stances on crypto policy. Under Powell, the Fed took a cautious, observational approach to crypto assets, never fully integrating them into its policy framework. Warsh, by contrast, explicitly stated during hearings that he supports bringing digital assets into the financial system and even described Bitcoin as "an important asset for policymaking."
More significantly, Warsh has categorically rejected pushing for a Fed-issued CBDC, calling it "a bad policy choice." This effectively rules out direct government competition with private stablecoins in the near term, preserving clearer space for existing stablecoins like USDC and USDT.
If the CLARITY Act passes, it will clearly delineate regulatory authority over digital assets between the SEC and CFTC, ending years of overlapping and conflicting oversight. Notably, the joint SEC-CFTC statement on March 17 classified protocol staking as a non-securities activity; if codified into law, this would elevate the guidance from administrative interpretation to statutory rule.
Far-Reaching Implications for the Stablecoin Sector
Warsh himself previously invested in the algorithmic stablecoin project Basis, giving him direct insight into the sector. As Fed Chair, he would directly oversee the development of the regulatory framework for stablecoin issuers. The CLARITY Act’s stablecoin yield provisions will have a direct impact on the fundamentals of projects like Circle. Should the current Tillis-Alsobrooks compromise take effect, allowing incentives for active participation, stablecoins could evolve from simple payment tools into yield-bearing financial assets.
Institutional Impact on DeFi
The finalized DeFi provisions in the CLARITY Act would grant statutory exemptions to non-custodial developers and distributed validator nodes, shielding them from being classified as licensed financial intermediaries. This would be a clear regulatory boon for validator ecosystems on major blockchains such as Ethereum and Solana.
Conclusion
The advancement of Kevin Warsh’s nomination and the legislative process for the CLARITY Act represent the two defining institutional variables facing the crypto industry in 2026. The former will determine the Fed’s stance on crypto assets within the broader financial system, while the latter will decide whether the industry receives a clear federal legal framework.
The significant overlap in timing between these two processes has created a window of policy resonance. This convergence will not only shape whether the U.S. can establish a regulatory edge in the global digital asset race, but will also profoundly affect capital flows and institutional participation in the global crypto markets. For industry participants, the density of policy signals in the coming weeks warrants close attention—regardless of how events ultimately unfold, every decision variable at this stage could leave a lasting mark on the long-term trajectory of the crypto industry.




