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MakerDAO Votes Against A More Streamlined Leadership

source-logo  blockworks.co  + 1 more 29 June 2022 14:30, UTC

MakerDAO community members voted against adding an advisory committee that would manage internal checks and balances within the DAO and educate MKR holders on complexities surrounding future proposals.

The proposal, introduced by MakerDAO figure Luca Prosperi, intended to have the protocol create a Lending Oversight Core Unit (nicknamed “LOVE”) in addition to the 22 other core units (CUs) currently. The idea was to implement a more streamlined leadership structure within the DAO (decentralized autonomous organization).

But the broader community didn’t love the concept. The decision to turn down a potential advisory committee was finalized on Monday, after more than 60% of votes were against the proposal and 38% voted in favor. By Maker governance standards, these were close votes with a high turnout — 293,911 MKR took part in the LOVE vote, amounting to nearly 30% of the circulating supply.

Over the last several days, we've seen the number of votes cast reach an all-time high, MKR borrow rates on Aave spike and a massive shift in MKR delegation in the last minutes of voting.

— GFX Labs (@labsGFX) June 27, 2022

“I do not believe that the DAO should be engaging in activities that require large amounts of trust in isolated groups of individuals, have little to no real-time transparency, or that are not driving us toward a decentralized future,” Chris Blec, recognized delegate of MakerDAO wrote in the forum discussion. 

Blec continued: “Every CU is incentivized to find ways to justify its own existence, and I feel that the proposed scope of LOVE would allow far too much subjectivity in that regard.”

According to GFX Labs, a group focused on DAO governance matters, there were some clear battle lines drawn this time, between opposing philosophical camps.

“Those who want to see more organization and control voted YES (TradFi and VCs). The NOs (most of the community) generally opposed the price tag and few deliverables and favored [Rune Christensen’s] Endgame plan.”

Heading for the endgame

MakerDAO is a cornerstone of the Ethereum DeFi ecosystem, allowing users to lend and borrow cryptocurrency, peer-to-peer. The protocol has its own native token, MKR, which allows holders to vote on various governance proposals. 

Since December 2017, the DAO has regulated an overcollateralized stablecoin, DAI, which aims to maintain a one-to-one peg with the US dollar and has grown to become the fourth-largest, with a market cap in excess of $6.2 billion, according to CoinGecko.

Christensen, who founded MakerDAO in 2014, outlined an “ambitious initiative,” two months ago, to move the DAO toward a “predetermined, immutable end state” sometime in the future, which he called The Endgame Plan.

“A key objective for me is to deal with the major contradictions and challenges that I see, and to also ensure that the project gets on a path towards a truly decentralized equilibrium,” Christensen wrote.

The plan calls on Maker DAO to restructure itself around a series of “MetaDAOs” or subDAOs that would replace the CUs each with their own distinct incentive-aligning token.

A slow road to effective governance for DAOs

Voter apathy has been a problem in Maker governance, despite the recent uptick in participation.

Delegates like the pseudonymous Hasu, host of the Uncommon Core podcast have been agitating for a more streamlined approach “to move away from micromanagement and towards a board-of-directors style DAO that sets the strategic direction for the protocol,” as he wrote on Twitter, in the final days of the vote. 

Although DAOs are primarily member-driven organizations, as it currently stands, DAOs have two main membership models: token-based membership and share-based membership. Over the past few months, a number of challenges have arisen around token- and share-based DAO governance, and MakerDAO is not the only organization that has been looking into new governance structures. 

Last week, Solana-powered lending protocol Solend DAO, passed a governance proposal limiting users borrowing to $50 million per account, with rollouts starting at $120 million and gradually decreasing. This proposal came after a single ‘whale’ wallet had gained over 90% of the protocol’s available lending assets, throwing into question how DAOs can practically deal with contract law in the physical space. 

Staking community Lido DAO had also proposed a ‘dual governance’ solution to reduce the decision-making scope of its LDO token holders. Although Lido DAO is currently deployed on the Ethereum network, LDO token holders have governance over liquid staking protocols on Polygon and Solana, which means their motivations may vary from those of stakers who are primarily on the Ethereum network. 

“Token-based governance is great for product-based protocols, but it is not the best for media DAOs or ecosystem DAOs because a community should not be owned by the richest or the one that arrived before others,” Marco Moshi, DAO lead at Polygon told Blockworks. 

Moshi says that an organization’s stakeholders will likely change over time, DAOs should take into account that their organization is evolving and the individuals involved will also be regularly changing. 

“The DAO space is very interesting and is a main evolution of Web3, it is one of the places where we can witness a real big level of engagement on the community side and on the builder side, so we must support new developments that will come after existing DAOs, and evolve and adopt a new generation of DAO tooling systems,” Moshi said.

blockworks.co

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