Ripple’s David Schwartz spoke at XRPLV2026, urging crypto to take CLARITY Act gains now and warned the six-week window may not stay open long.
Make hay while the sun shines. That is how Ripple’s President Monica Long framed it. David Schwartz, the company’s former CTO now serving as CTO Emeritus, repeated it from the XRPLV2026 Conference stage and did not seem to think it needed much elaboration.
Johnnykrypto00 on X shared a video of Schwartz speaking at the event, where he walked through how Ripple has been thinking about the CLARITY Act and whether to push for a perfect bill or take whatever clears.
Two Camps, One Strategy, No Time for Hesitation
The debate started internally at Ripple after Trump’s return to office. Two positions formed. One group pushed for full acceleration: go public, acquire customers, expand hard. The other urged caution, arguing that favorable conditions could reverse and reversals are expensive.
Schwartz said the company landed closer to the first camp. Not entirely. Decisions carrying what he called “live or die risks” got treated differently. Everything short of that threshold was fair game for moving now.
The sun was shining. Ripple moved.
Coinbase Said No. Schwartz Said He Gets It.
Coinbase pulled its support over certain bill provisions. Charles Hoskinson made noise about walking away entirely. Schwartz, speaking at the conference, said he is not critical of either.
The bluff matters. Saying you will walk away only functions if it looks credible. If every player signals they will accept anything, the negotiated result reflects that. Per the video shared by johnnykrypto00 on X, Schwartz said he gives those holdouts the benefit of the doubt, operating under the assumption that nobody actually wants nothing.
They want the best bill they can extract. That is a different position than wanting no bill at all.
Schwartz also flagged his own conflict of interest without being pushed. When what he believes lines up with what benefits Ripple, he said, it is worth naming that out loud. Digital asset regulatory clarity benefits the company directly. He did not pretend otherwise.
Six Weeks Was the Number He Put on It
Ripple’s former CTO said if the CLARITY Act does not move within roughly six weeks, the strategy of pushing to the edge may not have delivered. The cars were at the door. The walkaway threat works until it does not.
Someone at the conference compared the bill to the 1996 Telecom Act and asked whether passage could unlock a similar institutional wave. Schwartz answered without qualification. One hundred percent, twice.
His read on why DeFi has stalled at around $150 billion for two years: the average person does not have a product they actually need yet. Payments, loans, banking accounts, equities. Enterprise adoption builds the rails. Retail follows once the rails exist.
That is Ripple’s plan. Enterprise today, retail when the infrastructure supports it. Not unlike how the early internet served government and corporations before ordinary users arrived.
The Hoskinson concern came up directly too, that the bill could classify every new crypto project as a security and freeze innovation from the entry point. Schwartz called it the right concern to raise. He said Ripple has never been in the business of slamming the door after walking through it.
Whether that six-week clock is still running is now the more immediate question.


