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Jamie Dimon Lying on CLARITY Act and Here’s Why

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Ahmed Barakat

Author

Ahmed Barakat

Part of the Team Since

Aug 2025

About Author

Ahmed Balaha is a journalist and copywriter based in Georgia with a growing focus on blockchain technology, DeFi, AI, privacy, digital assets, and fintech innovation.

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Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse went directly at JPMorgan chief Jamie Dimon on Fox Business Wednesday, accusing him of ‘intentional misrepresentation’ over the CLARITY Act, the pending Senate legislation that would establish a comprehensive regulatory framework for U.S. crypto markets.

The charge is specific: Garlinghouse says Dimon is distorting the bill’s compliance implications to protect JPMorgan’s payments business, which generates roughly $20 billion in annual revenue and over $5 billion in profit.

The confrontation follows Dimon’s late-May Fox Business interview with host Maria Bartiromo, where he called the CLARITY Act inadequate on AML and BSA grounds and labeled Coinbase co-founder and CEO Brian Armstrong, the bill’s most vocal corporate champion, ‘full of shit.’ Garlinghouse used the same platform, the same host, to fire back.

The flashpoint is one specific provision: whether crypto exchanges like Coinbase can offer stablecoin yield to users holding stablecoin balances on their platforms. That single clause has drawn the full force of the banking lobby, and, Garlinghouse argues, Dimon’s personal opposition.

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Garlinghouse vs. Dimon: What the CLARITY Act Fight Is Actually About

Garlinghouse’s accusation is direct. ‘What Jamie Dimon did a disservice around… is that he’s representing that this reduces compliance concerns, that it makes it easier to do bad things,’ he told Bartiromo.

‘That’s just not true. It’s either intentional misrepresentation or even negligent to try to make support for the Clarity Act go away.’

Dimon’s stated position, that the CLARITY Act weakens anti-money-laundering and Bank Secrecy Act protections, gets one sentence of steel-manning: banks have a legitimate structural interest in ensuring crypto products carry equivalent compliance burdens.

The problem, per Garlinghouse, is that the bill doesn’t actually reduce those burdens. It creates a framework where none currently exists.

The dispute centers on one provision: stablecoin yields offered on crypto exchanges. Armstrong threatened to pull Coinbase’s support for any draft that excluded the clause.

Dimon framed Armstrong as ‘the only one’ pushing for it, spending ‘hundreds of millions of dollars in Washington.’

Garlinghouse acknowledged Armstrong is representing Coinbase’s interests specifically, but added that ‘the industry wants clarity, and wants regulation.’

That distinction matters structurally: the fight over stablecoin yield is Coinbase’s hill, but the broader crypto regulation framework behind the CLARITY Act has wide industry support.

JPMorgan’s $20B Payments Business: Why Dimon Has a Dog in This Fight

$20 billion in annual revenue. $5 billion in profit. That is JPMorgan’s payments empire, and it is the number that makes Garlinghouse’s accusation land as analysis rather than rhetoric.

Stablecoin yields on exchanges directly threaten that business model. If users can park stablecoins on Coinbase or a Ripple-adjacent platform and earn yield, deposits migrate away from bank accounts.

JPMorgan’s custody and payments revenue depends on controlling that liquidity. Allowing crypto exchanges to replicate a core banking function, interest-bearing balances, chips at the foundation of that moat.

Photo: Brad Garlinghouse

‘Jamie Dimon also should be clear he is trying to protect and dig a deeper moat for a business that’s extremely profitable for them,’ Garlinghouse said plainly.

JPMorgan has its own blockchain projects, JPM Coin and the Onyx platform, but critics including Garlinghouse have argued those are closed, permissioned systems designed to preserve JPMorgan’s control rather than enable open competition.

Dimon opposing the CLARITY Act while running a proprietary token network is the contradiction Garlinghouse is pointing at. Meanwhile, other major banks like Citi are moving deeper into tokenization, a divergence that exposes Dimon’s opposition as strategic, not principled.

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