Canada moves to ban crypto donations for election campaigns following UK
Bill C-25 follows years of warnings from Canada’s Chief Electoral Officer about the risk that crypto donations could pose to electoral integrity.
What to know:
- Canada’s Bill C-25 would ban cryptocurrency, money order and prepaid card donations across the federal political system, closing a fundraising channel that has seen virtually no use since crypto was first permitted in 2019.
- The Chief Electoral Officer, who initially favored tighter regulation, shifted in 2024 to recommending an outright prohibition, citing cryptocurrency’s pseudo-anonymity and the fundamental difficulty of verifying contributor identities.
- The bill, a reintroduction of the failed Bill C-65, sets 30-day deadlines to return or remit illegal crypto contributions and imposes penalties up to twice the contribution’s value plus $100,000 for corporations, and is currently at first reading in the House of Commons.
Canada’s federal government has moved to ban cryptocurrency donations to political campaigns, shutting down a fundraising channel that appears to have seen little to no real-world use in the country’s previous elections.
Bill C-25, the Strong and Free Elections Act, introduced March 26, would prohibit political contributions made in BTC and other cryptoassets, as well as in money orders and prepaid payment products, grouping them as forms of funding that are difficult to trace.
The ban applies broadly across the political system, covering registered parties, riding associations, candidates, leadership and nomination contestants, and third parties engaged in election advertising.
The move comes as U.K. government has also recently announced an immediate moratorium on cryptocurrency donations to political parties, citing concerns that digital assets could be used to hide the origins of foreign money in British politics.
Second attempt
Canada’s Bill C-25 addresses a theoretical vulnerability rather than a documented problem.
