Governance tokens
Governance tokens are cryptographic assets that confer voting rights in decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) and blockchain protocols, representing a novel mechanism for collective decision-making in distributed systems. Unlike traditional corporate shares, which typically allocate one vote per share and are held by a small number of institutional investors, governance tokens are designed to distribute decision-making power across a broad base of stakeholders. In theory, any token holder can propose changes to the protocol, vote on parameter adjustments, and delegate their voting power to representatives — a form of liquid democracy implemented in code.
The mechanism is simple in principle and complex in practice. Token holders stake their tokens to participate in governance, and the weight of their vote is proportional to their holdings. Proposals that achieve a quorum and a majority of votes are automatically executed by smart contracts, removing the need for trusted intermediaries. This is governance as protocol: the rules are embedded in the code, and the enforcement is automatic.
But the reality diverges sharply from the ideal. Governance tokens tend to concentrate in the hands of early investors, developers, and large holders (whales), producing plutocratic outcomes that resemble traditional corporate control more than decentralized democracy. On Ethereum, a small number of addresses control a majority of voting power in most major protocols. The promise of community