ENS DAO Shifts Budget Control to Foundation, Keeps Token Voting Power

What You Need to Know
- ENS DAO proposes shifting operations and treasury to ENS Foundation while token holders retain protocol control.
- Proposal argues token voting unsuitable for routine operational decisions; designed for neutral infrastructure stewardship instead.
- Delegate fatigue identified as structural governance failure mode rather than personnel problem across crypto protocols.
- ENS token down 94% from November 2021 peak, correlating with collapsed governance participation rates.
The Ethereum Name Service DAO has published a governance restructuring proposal that would shift operational control, treasury management, and grant distribution to the ENS Foundation, while token holders retain authority over the protocol itself and the power to remove Foundation directors. If passed, it would be one of the more substantive DAO governance overhauls attempted by a protocol that has not yet abandoned the model entirely.
The proposal’s diagnosis is more interesting than its solution. Most DAO governance failures get papered over with new committees or revised voting thresholds, and the previous ENS iteration tried exactly that, adding a budget-allocating board on top of the existing structure. This version argues that approach was insufficient and that the underlying problem is a category error: token voting was designed to steward neutral infrastructure, not to function as a standing budget committee making routine operational calls. That framing echoes a broader pattern visible across protocols that launched DAOs around 2021, many of which have since folded governance tokens back into equity structures or absorbed DAO entities into their core teams. ENS is attempting a middle path, and the fact that it is not venture-backed gives it unusual freedom to design something that does not need to satisfy a cap table.
Delegate fatigue is the most underreported governance failure mode in crypto, and the proposal naming it explicitly as a structural problem rather than a personnel one is the sharpest part of the diagnosis.
The ENS token trading at $4.79, down over 94% from its November 2021 peak, is context that matters here beyond the price itself. Governance participation tends to collapse when token value collapses, because the economic incentive to spend time on complex votes disappears with it. A restructuring that reduces the surface area of decisions token holders must make is partly a response to that reality. The treasury and endowment management problem the proposal flags, specifically the need for multi-year capital planning and the ability to act as a counterparty to institutional managers, also points toward a future where ENS is positioning its reserves more deliberately, though the proposal does not specify how.
The temp check was posted June 19, which means a formal governance vote has not yet been scheduled. Whether delegates who are already described as fatigued will engage substantively with a proposal about restructuring their own role is the practical test the process now faces.
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