
No verified record of Yellen using ‘stubborn participant’
There is no verified record of Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen using the phrase “stubborn participant” to describe Coinbase or its stance on the CLARITY Act. A review of public statements, Congressional testimony, enforcement announcements, and major news coverage finds no attributable instance of that wording.
Some summaries appear to conflate Yellen’s long-standing calls for stronger crypto oversight with specific characterizations of Coinbase. The available record shows oversight-focused remarks, not the quoted phrase.
What the CLARITY Act covers and Coinbase’s objections
The CLARITY Act is framed as establishing guardrails for digital assets, clarifying agency roles, and standardizing compliance obligations. The most disputed areas involve decentralized finance, stablecoin rewards, tokenized equities, and regulator jurisdiction.
Coinbase objects to provisions that could restrict DeFi operations, limit stablecoin yield programs, impede tokenized equities, and tilt authority toward the Securities and Exchange Commission over the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. It argues these changes could dampen U.S. onchain innovation.
Immediate impact on Senate process and industry response
A planned Senate markup was postponed after Coinbase withdrew support. Committee leaders have described the delay as temporary while negotiations continue. It is a “brief pause,” said Senator Tim Scott, Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee.
Coinbase has signaled that the current draft should not advance without significant fixes. It is “materially worse than the status quo,” said Brian Armstrong, CEO of Coinbase.
Other industry leaders view the bill as a step forward. That perspective was noted by Brad Garlinghouse, Ripple’s chief executive.
Legislative status, stakeholders, and market context
Senate Banking Committee pause and ongoing negotiations
Staff are working to reconcile disagreements around DeFi, stablecoin rewards, tokenized equities, and jurisdictional balance. A revised schedule has not been announced in the materials reviewed.
Coinbase and Treasury positions summarized
Coinbase favors clear allowances for compliant onchain products and tokenization, along with preservation of stablecoin rewards where lawful. Treasury’s public remarks have emphasized risk mitigation and stronger oversight of crypto markets. At the time of this writing, Coinbase Global (COIN) traded at 226.50 pre-market, down 0.54%, with a previous close of 241.15 and a market cap of 61.409B, based on data from NasdaqGS.
FAQ about CLARITY Act
What does the CLARITY Act propose, and which provisions are most controversial?
It seeks clear crypto guardrails; controversies center on DeFi restrictions, stablecoin yield limits, tokenized equities treatment, and SEC–CFTC jurisdictional balance.
Why does Coinbase oppose the current draft of the CLARITY Act?
Coinbase argues the draft curtails onchain innovation, especially DeFi, tokenization, and stablecoin rewards, and concentrates authority with the SEC, making outcomes worse than today.
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