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Chimera readability score 56 out of 100, Graduate reading level.

Commodity Futures Trading Commission Chairman Michael Selig said the Clarity Act remains within reach, days after Congress missed its July 4 target to pass the crypto market-structure bill. “We’re so close. We have to get this done,” Selig told Fox Business host Maria Bartiromo.
Some analysts give the measure even odds of passage before the August 7 recess.
The bill would divide oversight of digital assets between the CFTC and the Securities and Exchange Commission, a split the industry has sought for years. The House passed the legislation last summer. The Senate has yet to hold a floor vote.
Selig, a Trump appointee confirmed in December, backed the Clarity Act effort as a matter of national competitiveness. He backed the effort as a matter of national competitiveness.
“It’s critical that we have a federal standard for crypto assets,” he said, pointing to a patchwork of state laws that, in his account, has hurt U.S. business. He described the goal as certainty, clarity, and consumer protection, and called the measure bipartisan. “We have to get it across the line,” he said.
Asked about the holdup, Selig pointed to scope. Democrats have pressed for ethics language addressing President Trump, his family, and their crypto ventures, a demand he characterized as a distraction.
“There’s a little bit of creep into ethics and other issues, and they’re just derailing the real opportunity to have a bipartisan bill,” he said.
Democrats have framed the Clarity Act provisions as consumer protection. The bill has also drawn disputes over illicit-finance rules and over a reopened piece of the GENIUS Act, the stablecoin law, that concerns whether exchanges may pay yield on stablecoin balances.
Senator Cynthia Lummis, who leads the Senate Banking Committee’s digital assets subcommittee, has said negotiators aim to release bill text and hold a vote this month.
The committee advanced the measure in a 15-9 vote, with two Democrats joining Republicans. Lawmakers have warned that a failure to act before the recess could delay the next opening for years.
Selig on prediction markets, Iran beyond Clarity Act
Bartiromo also asked Selig about prediction markets, where Kalshi and Polymarket processed a combined $24 billion in volume over the past year.
Selig said the CFTC has proposed rules for the sector and has sued nine states in a fight over jurisdiction. On markets during the U.S. strikes on Iran near the Strait of Hormuz, he said crypto held its ground and served as a hedge, while the agency worked to keep oil and derivatives markets orderly.
For now, the Clarity Act’s fate rests on released text, a Senate vote, and a calendar that leaves a few weeks before the August recess.

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

This text appears to be standard political reporting synthesizing comments from officials and legislative status updates regarding the Clarity Act, exhibiting characteristics of established news journalism.

Signals Detected
low severity: Moderate sentence length variance; uses direct quotes and shifts focus naturally.
low severity: Flows logically from the main topic (Clarity Act status) to specific details (Selig's rationale, political splits, related issues).
low severity: Well-structured presentation of multiple interview points and legislative background without sounding like a summary dump.
low severity: Relies on specific names, committee actions (15-9 vote), and direct quotes, which requires a factual grounding that points toward primary source reporting.
Human Indicators
The integration of direct quotes from Chairman Selig and Senator Lummis, combined with specific procedural details (e.g., House pass, Senate vote, August recess deadline), suggests reporting based on actual recorded statements.
The handling of counterarguments (Democrats' focus on ethics vs. consumer protection) shows a nuanced engagement typical of journalistic synthesis.