World Liberty Financial is restructuring how voting power works inside its protocol, and the proposal passing with 99% approval tells you almost nothing about who actually supports it.
The governance proposal running from March 5 to March 12 introduces a stake-to-vote requirement for holders of unlocked WLFI tokens. To retain voting rights on any future proposals, including the release of the 80% of tokens still locked, holders of liquid tokens must now commit them to a six-month mandatory lockup. Tokens that are not staked lose all governance influence immediately.
The 2% annual yield offered to stakers is the detail that frames the criticism most clearly. WLFI has declined over 75% from its peak price. A 2% yield on a token down 75% does not compensate for the loss. Critics argue the yield is not a reward. It is an incentive to stop selling, structured as a governance requirement rather than a voluntary choice.
The proposal introduces two participation tiers above standard voting. The Node tier requires 10 million WLFI tokens staked, approximately $1 million at current prices, granting access to subsidized USD1 stablecoin conversions. The Super Node tier requires 50 million tokens, approximately $5 million, and grants direct communication rights and priority partnership access to the Trump-linked team running the project.
Retail holders who cannot reach either threshold are excluded from both tiers entirely. They can stake their tokens for the 2% yield and retain basic voting rights. They cannot access the economic incentives or the strategic access that the upper tiers provide. The tiered structure creates three classes of participant with meaningfully different access to the project’s inner workings, separated by capital requirements that most retail investors cannot meet.
The vote currently shows 99% approval. That figure requires immediate context. Total participation sits at approximately 1.4% of the token supply. A 99% approval rate on a 1.4% turnout means roughly 1.39% of all WLFI tokens voted yes. The remaining 98.6% of the supply did not participate.
The governance paradox critics have identified is structural. Holders of already-locked tokens, predominantly founders and large insiders, retain their voting rights without any additional staking requirement. Early retail investors who hold the unlocked 20% of supply must stake their liquid tokens to vote. The people being asked to give up liquidity to participate are the same people whose liquidity is being restricted by what they are voting on. The people whose tokens are already locked face no equivalent requirement to participate.
That asymmetry is not an oversight. It is the design.
A governance vote where insiders vote freely while retail investors must lock assets to participate, where approval stands at 99% on 1.4% turnout, and where the proposal directly controls when the majority of retail investment becomes accessible, fits a pattern that governance researchers call a captured vote. The outcome reflects the preferences of those with the most tokens and the fewest constraints on participating, not the preferences of the broader holder base.
Whether this constitutes a legitimate governance process depends on what standard you apply. By the letter of the smart contract rules, the vote is proceeding as designed. By the standard of meaningful representation, a 1.4% turnout deciding the fate of the remaining 80% of locked retail capital is a different kind of outcome entirely.
WLFI is a project backed by figures with significant political visibility. That visibility attracted retail capital at prices that are now down 75%. The governance structure being voted on this week determines whether those retail investors ever recover access to the majority of what they put in.
The post World Liberty Financial Is Passing a Vote That Could Lock Retail Investors Out of Their Own Money appeared first on ETHNews.


BitGo’s move creates further competition in a burgeoning European crypto market that is expected to generate $26 billion revenue this year, according to one estimate. BitGo, a digital asset infrastructure company with more than $100 billion in assets under custody, has received an extension of its license from Germany’s Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin), enabling it to offer crypto services to European investors. The company said its local subsidiary, BitGo Europe, can now provide custody, staking, transfer, and trading services. Institutional clients will also have access to an over-the-counter (OTC) trading desk and multiple liquidity venues.The extension builds on BitGo’s previous Markets-in-Crypto-Assets (MiCA) license, also issued by BaFIN, and adds trading to the existing custody, transfer and staking services. BitGo acquired its initial MiCA license in May 2025, which allowed it to offer certain services to traditional institutions and crypto native companies in the European Union.Read more
