His opening speech walked through AI deepfakes, foreign interference, and administrative penalties. Crypto did not come up, according to an official transcript. Asked by a Liberal colleague to pick from three priorities — foreign interference in nominations, political financing transparency or artificial intelligence — Lamoureux picked AI.

Several Conservative Members of Parliament — the party is led by Pierre Poilievre, who marketed himself as crypto-friendly during the last election — raised questions about political financing rules and how new restrictions would be applied.

But the issue never became a central point of contention.

Conservatives backed sending the bill to committee, while other opposition parties raised concerns about different elements of the legislation, but did not center their arguments on crypto.

The limited resistance also reflects how little crypto has been used in Canadian politics.

Canada has technically allowed crypto donations since 2019, when Elections Canada classified them as non-cash, in-kind contributions similar to property. But no major federal party has publicly accepted crypto, and no contributions have been disclosed in recent elections.

C-25 is itself a re-run. Its predecessor, Bill C-65, contained identical crypto language and died when Parliament was prorogued — suspended without dissolving — in January 2025.

Canada’s Chief Electoral Officer recommended tighter regulation of crypto donations in 2022, then, in November 2024, shifted to recommending an outright prohibition, citing pseudo-anonymity and the difficulty of verifying contributors’ identities.

The U.S. is moving in the opposite direction. The Federal Election Commission has permitted crypto donations to American campaigns since 2014.

Earlier this year, the U.K. passed a law banning crypto donations, citing concerns that digital assets could be used to hide the origins of foreign money in British politics.

AI Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk’s full AI Policy.

Higit pang Para sa Iyo

Kremlin in winter. (Michael Parulava/Unsplash)

The European Union noted that Russia has become increasingly reliant on cryptocurrency to circumvent sanctions.

Ano ang dapat malaman:

  • The EU unveiled its largest Russia sanctions package in two years, imposing a total ban on the country’s crypto providers and platforms and blocking the central bank’s digital ruble and the RUBx stablecoin.
  • The measures target 20 Russian banks, four third-country financial institutions linked to Russia’s SPFS messaging network, and…

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