Because the House agreed to a Senate‑passed resolution text that bundles the three measures procedurally, but does not itself constitute enrolled statutory language. As a result, the package does not go directly to the President.
The approval positions House and Senate leaders to move the underlying bills individually, fold them into another legislative vehicle, or draft a consolidated conference substitute that can clear both chambers in identical statutory form for presidential action.
Since this was a procedural bundle rather than a single formal bill, the next step requires converting the package into enactable legislation.
Committees or leadership can discharge, mark up, or attach the component measures to moving vehicles.
Libertarian‑leaning and House Freedom Caucus members objected to the bundling and pressed for stand‑alone debate time.
Representative Chip Roy told reporter Laura Weiss he wants “a hard ban” on a US central bank digital currency and ranked the CLARITY Act as equally important, saying opponents “need to be dealing with this all at once.”