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Coinwy > Blog > News > Canada May Ban Crypto Political Donations | Coinwy
News

Canada May Ban Crypto Political Donations | Coinwy

Thiago Alvarez
Last updated: March 29, 2026 4:32 am
Thiago Alvarez
Published: March 29, 2026
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Canada has introduced legislation that would ban cryptocurrency donations to political parties, but the move targets a funding channel that has seen virtually no use since it became legal seven years ago, raising questions about whether the bill addresses a real threat or sends a broader regulatory signal to the crypto sector.

Contents
Why Canada Wants to Block Crypto From ElectionsPrivacy Advocates and the Traceability CounterargumentWhat Bill C-25 Signals for Canada’s Crypto Sector

Key Takeaway

  • Bill C-25 would ban crypto, money order, and prepaid card donations to Canadian political campaigns, with penalties up to $100,000 for corporations.
  • Crypto political donations have been legal in Canada since 2019 but have seen virtually no documented use, making the ban largely preemptive.
  • The legislation is part of a broader Western trend, with the UK recently imposing its own moratorium on crypto political donations.

House Leader Steven MacKinnon introduced Bill C-25, the “Strong and Free Elections Act,” with its first reading in the House of Commons on March 28, 2026. The bill groups cryptocurrency alongside money orders and prepaid cards as “forms of funding that are difficult to trace,” proposing a total ban on their use in political contributions.

The legislation covers registered political parties, riding associations, candidates, leadership contestants, nomination contestants, and third parties engaged in election advertising. It also expands existing disinformation rules to cover realistic AI-generated video deepfakes of electoral candidates intended to mislead voters.

Why Canada Wants to Block Crypto From Elections

The government frames the bill as an election security measure. MacKinnon cited the need for “new investments to counter foreign threats and stronger government coordination to ensure elections remain free, fair and secure.” Under Canada’s existing elections framework, full donor disclosure is required, and crypto’s pseudonymous nature complicates that mandate.

Canada’s Chief Electoral Officer initially favored tighter regulation of crypto donations rather than a ban. By 2024, that position shifted to recommending outright prohibition, citing the fundamental difficulty of verifying contributor identities through pseudonymous wallets. The shift reflects growing concern that crypto could serve as a vector for foreign money entering Canadian politics, even if it hasn’t yet.

Bill C-25 commits $31.5 million CAD to strengthen foreign threat monitoring for elections, signaling the scale of the government’s concern about interference.

$31.5M CAD

Committed to Foreign Threat Monitoring

Bill C-25 allocates $31.5 million CAD to strengthen election interference defences. Source: Nanaimo News Now

Violations carry penalties of up to twice the contributed amount, plus $25,000 for individuals or $100,000 for corporations. Recipients who receive crypto contributions would have 30 days to return or remit the funds.

This is not Canada’s first attempt at such a ban. A predecessor bill, Bill C-65, contained identical crypto donation provisions but died when Parliament was prorogued in January 2025. The reintroduction as Bill C-25 suggests the government sees the issue as unfinished business, not a passing concern. Similar regulatory momentum is building internationally; legislators in the U.S. are also navigating how crypto fits into existing financial and political frameworks.

Privacy Advocates and the Traceability Counterargument

Critics of the ban argue that public blockchain transactions are, paradoxically, more traceable than cash. Every on-chain transaction is recorded on an immutable ledger visible to anyone, while cash donations leave no comparable audit trail. This counterintuitive reality undermines the government’s framing of crypto as inherently opaque.

The distinction between banning and regulating is central to the pushback. Some jurisdictions have successfully implemented disclosure requirements for crypto donations rather than blanket prohibitions. Canada could, in theory, require donors to verify their identity through KYC-compliant exchanges before making political contributions, preserving both transparency and the right to donate using legal property.

Canadian Charter protections around freedom of expression and political participation also factor into the debate. If cryptocurrency is legal to hold and transact in Canada, restricting its use in political donations raises questions about whether the government is targeting a legitimate form of property. The fact that crypto donations have been legal since 2019 with virtually zero documented use makes the ban appear preemptive rather than responsive to an actual problem.

What Bill C-25 Signals for Canada’s Crypto Sector

The practical impact on political fundraising is likely minimal. Crypto donations have seen virtually no use since the framework was introduced seven years ago. The real question is what the bill signals about Canada’s broader regulatory posture toward digital assets in 2026.

Canada has already shut down 47 crypto firms in early 2026, and the donation ban fits a pattern of tightening oversight. The UK recently announced an immediate moratorium on crypto political donations, citing identical concerns about digital assets hiding the origins of foreign money in politics. Together, these moves suggest a coordinated Western democratic trend to ringfence elections from crypto-facilitated interference.

For the broader crypto market, which has seen institutional players push deeper into stablecoin infrastructure, the Canadian bill adds another data point to the regulatory landscape that investors are navigating globally.

Bull case: Formal regulation, even restrictive regulation, brings crypto further into the mainstream legal framework. A clear ban removes ambiguity and could be a precursor to more structured rules that legitimize crypto’s role in other areas of Canadian finance.

Bear case: The bill, combined with the 47 firm shutdowns, signals a hostile regulatory environment. Companies and developers may choose friendlier jurisdictions, slowing crypto innovation and adoption in Canada at a time when other nations are competing for digital asset businesses.

Bill C-25 now faces committee review and parliamentary debate before it can become law. Given that its predecessor died once already, the legislative path is far from guaranteed.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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ByThiago Alvarez
Thiago Alvarez is a crypto and fintech analyst at Coinwy, covering blockchain payments, DeFi protocols, and digital asset regulation. With a background in financial technology and compliance analysis, Thiago focuses on evaluating the operational viability and regulatory positioning of emerging crypto projects. His work examines token economics, cross-border payment infrastructure, and institutional adoption trends across global markets.
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