
Cardano governance is in crisis as an 81% stake majority opposes a 32.9 million ADA research funding proposal.
Summary
- An 81% active stake majority is opposing a 32.9 million ADA proposal to fund Input Output Global’s research lab for another year through Cardano’s treasury.
- Founder Charles Hoskinson called the vote existential for Cardano’s identity as a science-based blockchain, warning scientists could leave if the proposal fails.
- The vote runs through June 8, with several dReps demanding competitive open RFP bids rather than an automatic IOG budget renewal.
A Cardano governance crisis has emerged on-chain as an 81% active stake majority is currently opposing a 32.9 million ADA proposal to fund Input Output Global’s core research team for another year. The opposition is led primarily by Japanese delegated representatives who argue the proposal lacks tight, auditable milestones.
“This doesn’t have anything to do with me. This has to do with destroying the entire core of our ecosystem. Cardano is the science coin. That’s our brand,” Charles Hoskinson said in response to the vote.
Why the IOG vote matters for Cardano’s long-term roadmap
The IOG research lab is responsible for Cardano’s peer-reviewed development approach, including the Ouroboros consensus protocol. A failure to renew its funding would leave the protocol without its primary academic development engine.
Several dReps want competing teams to bid against IOG through open RFPs rather than automatic renewal. ADA was trading near $0.25, down approximately 60% over the past 200 days.
Crypto.news has reported on Hoskinson’s earlier warning that crypto markets would get “redder,” made during a February 2026 livestream where he positioned Cardano as entering a commercialisation phase.
What the milestone controversy reveals about decentralised governance
Critics of the IOG proposal argue it lacks specific, time-bound deliverables that a decentralised treasury process should require. The sentiment reflects a broader tension in Cardano’s Voltaire governance era between institutional efficiency and community accountability.
Crypto.news has tracked Hoskinson’s January 2026 warning that White House crypto czar David Sacks should resign if the Clarity Act failed to pass. Both episodes reflect the same impatience with institutional processes that fail to deliver tangible outcomes on a predictable timeline.
The voting period runs through June 8. If the proposal fails, scientists could leave, ending the peer-reviewed research model that defines Cardano’s identity. Crypto.news has covered analysis examining the gap between Hoskinson’s ambitions and Cardano’s on-chain adoption metrics, a tension the governance dispute now makes impossible to ignore.

