Senate Democrats reconvened on February 4, 2026 for a closed-door caucus meeting focused on cryptocurrency market structure and digital asset regulation, marking renewed legislative engagement after weeks of delay in the Senate.
The session — the first Democratic member-level discussion since the Senate Banking Committee postponed its market structure markup last month — aimed to clarify the party’s stance on the Clarity Act, the long-running bill intended to establish a federal regulatory framework for digital assets and resolve jurisdictional disputes between agencies like the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).
Lawmakers and staff reportedly discussed key policy areas such as stablecoin regulation, ethics and DeFi oversight, and other structural issues that have stalled progress in the Senate. The closed-door format was meant to allow candid debate among Democratic senators about how best to move the legislation forward after partisan delays.
The meeting comes as the crypto policy landscape faces both momentum and challenges. While the Senate Agriculture Committee recently advanced a digital asset market structure bill, the broader package has struggled to gain traction amid disagreements over stablecoin rules and the division of regulatory power.
Supporters of the renewed discussions see the February 4 meeting as a sign that Democratic lawmakers are intensifying their internal deliberations, potentially paving the way for future negotiations with Republicans and the White House — though the path to a floor vote remains complex amid conflicting priorities and the legislative calendar.
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