Hoskinson Vs. Cardano Foundation: From Berlin Parties To ‘Useful Idiots’

Cardano news

A fresh public clash between Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson and the Cardano Foundation (CF) has reignited long-running tensions over governance, accountability and culture inside the ecosystem. The latest dispute centers on two flashpoints: a community-approved summit budget and a dispute over “useful idiots.”

Commenting on X about the Cardano Summit in Berlin and its associated budget, Hoskinson attacked what he framed as resistance to scrutiny at the Foundation: “Also known as we don’t want accountability, oversight, or real KPIs so please let us return to no scrutiny and 6 million ada parties in Berlin.”

The Hoskinson Vs. Cardano Foundation Beef Flares Up Again

He linked that criticism directly to comments from Nicolas Cerny, the Cardano Foundation’s community and governance lead. In an earlier post, Cerny had written: “The ‘CF derangement syndrome’ is flaring up again. I strongly advise practicing critical thinking rather than simply parroting the talking points of certain individuals. You’re better than just being a useful idiot for someone’s political games.”

Hoskinson seized on this wording as emblematic of a deeper cultural problem at the Foundation, saying: “It is also extraordinary that the community lead at the CF calls the community ‘useful idiots’ when they ask for oversight and control over their foundation. Are you all getting the arrogance of their culture? It’s fundamentally broken.”

He later drew a clear line around his own base: “No one in my community is a useful idiot.”

Cerny, in follow-up posts, tried to supply context. He argued that fair criticism “is always welcome and encouraged,” claimed the CF has “a culture of listening and engaging,” and pointed back to Cardano’s original three-pillar model.

Citing a 2018 description of Cardano.org, he noted that the Foundation was initially tasked with standards, community support and regulatory engagement, while Emurgo was presented as the entity responsible for investing in start-ups and helping businesses, including stablecoin projects, build on Cardano.

“Based on this,” Cerny wrote, “Emurgo was the entity originally responsible for getting businesses, like stablecoin projects, to build on Cardano […] Many things have changed since then, and the Cardano Foundation has had to pick up more responsibilities, so I understand why people are frustrated. However, it seems unfair to blame an organization for not fulfilling a role it was never originally designed to fill. Regardless, we are doing it now because it matters.”

The Foundation today explicitly presents a wider mandate, including support for DeFi liquidity, Web3 integrations and real-world adoption, and has formalized these priorities in its public roadmap. Hoskinson, however, continues to argue that structural issues at the CF outweigh those efforts.

Replying to a community member who urged IOG, CF and Emurgo to “team up in favour of growth” and warned that “this is wrong” if the three entities cannot work constructively, Hoskinson was blunt: “I spent years trying to work with them. It is not possible with their current form and culture. They need oversight and leadership changes. Only uncompromising and continuous scrutiny can force this change and enable a reset.”

The result is a governance paradox at the heart of Cardano. On paper, the ecosystem is rolling out one of the industry’s most elaborate on-chain governance stacks. In practice, its founding institutions remain locked in a public struggle over mandate, legitimacy and tone — one now symbolized by Berlin’s “6 million ada parties” on one side and “useful idiots” on the other.

At press time, ADA traded at $0.458.

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