Charles Hoskinson warns Cardano could lose its scientists

Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson warned that the network’s research ecosystem could face deep cuts after several Japanese Delegate Representatives voted against a key funding proposal.
Hoskinson addressed the Japanese Cardano community in a translated X post on May 21. He said the funding dispute could affect the researchers and labs behind Cardano’s academic work.
He warned that if the proposal fails, “Cardano will lose its scientists, and our lab will be forced to close.” Hoskinson also said the research group took years to build and could be hard to replace if funding certainty disappears.
一部の日本のdRepが私たちの研究提案に反対票を投じたことに、深い悲しみを覚えています。…
— Charles Hoskinson (@IOHK_Charles) May 20, 2026
Funding vote tests Cardano governance
The dispute centers on Cardano’s decentralized governance system, where Delegate Representatives vote on proposals that shape the network’s spending and direction. The rejected research proposal now places that process under closer review.
Some users argued that decentralized governance means leaders must accept votes even when they disagree with the outcome. Hoskinson pushed back, saying the issue was larger than a personal concern and touched the core of Cardano’s identity.
He wrote that the matter “doesn’t have anything to do with me” and said it concerns “destroying the entire core of our ecosystem.” He added that “Cardano is the science coin,” pointing to the network’s long-running research-based brand.
Research remains central to Cardano’s brand
Cardano’s official website describes the network as a proof-of-stake blockchain founded on peer-reviewed research and evidence-based development. It also says Cardano was the first blockchain platform built through peer-reviewed research.
That background explains why the funding dispute has drawn attention. Cardano has long used its academic model to separate itself from faster-moving blockchain rivals. A major cut to research funding would raise questions about how the network protects that model through community voting.
The Cardano Foundation also says it supports developers, institutions, businesses, regulators, and policymakers through its ecosystem work. Its website lists developer support, education, and community resources among its main activities.
$ADA pressure adds to the debate
The governance fight comes as Cardano’s market position remains under pressure. $ADA traded near $0.25 at press time, down about 60% over the past 200 days, according to crypto.news price data. Hoskinson has also discussed possible developer incentives and $ADA buybacks.
Cardano ($ADA) price chart, source: crypto.news
Another related report said Midnight had named MoneyGram, Vodafone, and eToro as operators, but $ADA still traded lower as investors focused on weak price action. Midnight is tied to Cardano’s wider development plan and privacy-focused infrastructure.
The vote now adds a governance layer to that market story. Hoskinson has asked $ADA holders to delegate to representatives who support Cardano’s long-term research agenda. The funding proposal’s outcome may show how much control the community wants researchers and core builders to keep as Cardano continues its shift toward decentralized decision-making.