The Solana Policy Institute, a Washington-focused nonprofit launched in late 2025 to advance blockchain-specific legislative and regulatory strategy, has characterized the current U.S. crypto policy environment as entering a materially new phase – one defined by implementation rather than survival, and by legislative specificity rather than existential debate.
Kristin Smith, President of the Institute and former executive director of the Blockchain Association, stated the shift plainly: ‘For a long time we were playing defense,’ adding that the industry’s posture has now moved toward establishing durable rules of the road.
We suspect the Institute’s public framing is not merely descriptive but strategic – a signal to institutional capital, regulatory counterparts, and legislative staff that the sector has sufficient policy stability to warrant engagement at a higher level of specificity.
When a blockchain-specific policy organization with this institutional pedigree characterizes the environment this way, it functions as a credibility marker aimed at the compliance officers, asset managers, and agency rulemakers who have been watching from a cautious distance. The timing – coinciding with the Clarity Act’s anticipated April 2026 markup and the post-GENIUS Act settlement of stablecoin policy – reinforces that reading.
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Solana Policy Institute: Mandate, Structure, and the Legislative Developments Driving the ‘New Phase’ Framing
The Solana Policy Institute describes itself as a non-partisan nonprofit operating across three policy arenas: Congress, where it pursues legal certainty through market structure legislation; federal regulatory agencies, where it engages on rulemaking; and the White House, where it monitors and shapes executive priorities.
Its CEO, Miller Whitehouse-Levine – formerly an early employee of the DeFi Education Fund – has been explicit that the Institute’s advocacy is intended to be technology-neutral, seeking a level competitive playing field rather than outcomes that advantage Solana-based infrastructure over rival networks.
The specific developments underpinning the Institute’s ‘new phase’ characterization are identifiable. The GENIUS Act’s passage in 2025 resolved the most contentious stablecoin questions – reserve requirements, issuer eligibility, federal versus state licensing – that had stalled legislative progress for two prior congressional sessions.
The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, known as the Clarity Act, is tracking toward committee markup in April 2026 with reported bipartisan support, which would represent the first comprehensive market structure bill to advance that far in the Senate. Whitehouse-Levine has articulated the Institute’s core concern as the weaponization of legal ambiguity – noting that ‘crypto better than any other industry unfortunately understands how legal ambiguities or interpretations can be weaponized against an industry’ – and has framed clear SEC-CFTC jurisdictional demarcation on securities versus commodities as the central structural objective.
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Daniel Frances is a technical writer and Web3 educator specializing in macroeconomics and DeFi mechanics. A crypto native since 2017, Daniel leverages his background in on-chain analytics to author evidence-based reports and deep-dive guides. He holds certifications from The Blockchain Council, and is dedicated to providing “information gain” that cuts through market hype to find real-world blockchain utility.
Source: https://www.coinspeaker.com/solana-policy-institute-crypto-policy-new-phase/







