HomeRegulationsSenate Crypto Clarity Act Draft Gives Cardano Delegation Key Protection

Senate Crypto Clarity Act Draft Gives Cardano Delegation Key Protection

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Senate CLARITY Act draft protects Cardano delegation, treats ADA as a digital commodity, and allows bank custody and staking.

The U.S. Senate Banking Committee’s latest crypto CLARITY Act draft has drawn attention from the Cardano community. 

The proposal appears to protect Cardano’s delegation model, while treating ADA as a network token under a digital commodity framework.

Senate Draft Gives Cardano Delegation Key Protection

The new Senate draft of the crypto CLARITY Act gives direct attention to proof-of-stake networks. Its language appears to protect delegation models like Cardano’s.

Cardano allows ADA holders to delegate tokens to stake pool operators. Users do not give up custody, and they can still control their ADA.

This model is different from many pooled staking services. It lets users support network security without transferring ownership to another party.

The draft also appears to protect liquid staking from being treated as a security. This point may matter for staking platforms and token holders.

For Cardano, delegation is a core part of the network. The bill’s language may reduce legal concern around that structure.

Stake pool operators may also receive protection under the draft. Running a node would not create securities liability under the reported framework.

Developers may also gain legal cover for building open-source tools. This would apply when they do not control user funds or manage investor returns.

ADA May Fall Under Digital Commodity Oversight

The CLARITY Act draft sets a clearer split between the SEC and CFTC. The SEC would oversee securities-like digital assets.

The CFTC would oversee digital commodity spot markets. ADA appears to fit the bill’s network token category, based on the shared draft details.

That treatment would place ADA under CFTC oversight. It would also move Cardano away from a securities-based framework.

The draft links this treatment to decentralized networks. It also refers to decentralized governance systems in its market structure rules.

Cardano’s governance system, known as CIP-1694, appears to match that language. CIP-1694 supports on-chain governance through delegated representatives and community voting.

The bill’s approach may create a clearer path for ADA trading. It may also help exchanges assess listing and compliance duties.

Banks would also be allowed to custody ADA under the draft. They could also offer staking services, based on the reported provisions.

This would give regulated financial firms a path to support ADA services. It would also place such activity inside federal banking rules.

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Committee Markup Marks Early Senate Test

The Senate Banking Committee vote is scheduled for May 14, 2026. The markup is an early step in the Senate process.

The vote does not mean the bill has passed Congress. The draft could still change before any final vote.

The proposal is reported to contain 309 pages and nine titles. It covers exchanges, token markets, DeFi, custody, stablecoins, and customer assets.

The bill would ban interest payments for simply holding stablecoins. However, transaction-based or activity-based rewards may remain allowed.

The draft also creates separate rules for DeFi. It includes protections for self-custody and open-source developers.

Customer asset treatment is also addressed in the proposal. If an exchange fails, customer coins would not be treated as creditor property.

The draft also blocks central bank digital currencies from being used as monetary policy tools. It does not include a clear ban on officials earning from crypto projects.

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