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Justin Sun slams Trump‑backed WLFI vote as ‘world tyranny’ in explosive new X post

Dorian Batycka
Edited by
News
Justin Sun condemns WLFI governance as world tyranny

WLFI governance scandal sees Justin Sun accuse Trump‑backed World Liberty Financial of “world tyranny” over coercive token lockups and anonymous control.

Summary
  • Justin Sun calls WLFI’s latest governance proposal “one of the most absurd governance scams” he has seen, alleging coercive lockups and frozen voting power.
  • The Trump‑backed World Liberty Financial is already under scrutiny for tying WLFI voting rights to 180‑day staking and for heavy concentration of voting power in a handful of wallets.
  • WLFI’s token, once touted as a flagship DeFi asset, now trades around $0.08 with a market cap near $2.6 billion, as legal and governance disputes intensify.

Justin Sun has accused World Liberty Financial’s WLFI governance of “world tyranny,” alleging that a new staking proposal weaponizes token lockups, strips dissenters of voting rights, and centralizes control in anonymous hands. His comments escalate a months‑long dispute with the Trump‑linked DeFi project, coming as WLFI trades near $0.08 and remains more than 70% below prior highs.

In a new X post on April 15, Tron founder Justin Sun blasted World Liberty Financial’s latest WLFI governance proposal as “world tyranny, not world free finance,” calling it “one of the most absurd governance scams I’ve ever seen.” Sun, a major early backer of the Trump‑associated project, warned that the vote could determine the fate of “billions of dollars in assets” and amount to a “naked deprivation of holders’ property rights.”

World Liberty Financial, whose WLFI token has previously been promoted as part of a Trump‑aligned crypto push, has already faced criticism for proposals that force investors to stake their only unlocked tokens for 180 days just to retain governance rights. One March proposal linked voting power to long‑term staking with an estimated 2% annual yield and introduced node tiers requiring multi‑million WLFI stakes, a design critics said entrenched insiders and early whales.

Sun claims WLFI’s new proposal punishes dissent by locking tokens “indefinitely, with no path to unlocking” for those who vote against it, arguing “you oppose this proposal, and you’re punished… this isn’t voting; it’s coercion.” He also says his own holdings, representing roughly 4% of WLFI voting power, have been frozen and that “the team holds the power to freeze tokens—they decide who gets to vote and who doesn’t,” rendering the outcome “decided before the vote even started.”

According to previous reporting, WLFI governance has already shown signs of extreme concentration, with one staking‑system vote receiving 99.12% approval while 76% of voting tokens came from just 10 wallets, giving a tiny set of holders effective control over outcomes. Separate analyses and WLFI documentation indicate that around 80% of presale tokens remain locked under terms subject to future governance proposals, magnifying the impact of any changes to unlock schedules and burn mechanics.

In his post, Sun alleges that “actual control of the WLFI smart contract is held by a 3/5 anonymous multisig,” while an unnamed guardian wallet can blacklist addresses, meaning “governance proposals, on‑chain votes, and community discussions are all just theater.” He further criticizes WLFI for requiring voters to undergo identity verification and compliance checks while “those with absolute power remain anonymous,” calling the setup “worse than tyranny” and “dictatorship dressed in DAO clothing.”

WLFI’s token has plummeted more than 70% from peak levels, now hovering near $0.08 with a market cap around $2.5 billion and 24‑hour volumes close to $80 million, according to major exchanges. The project reportedly raised more than $460 million in its early phase, and Sun says the stakes of the current vote—governing unlock schedules, governance rights, and potential permanent destruction of billions of tokens—go far beyond routine parameter tweaks.

Sun concludes that “results produced under these conditions lack legitimacy, should not be binding, and should not be recognized,” urging WLFI holders to “voice opposition in all public channels” and “preserve all legal recourse rights.” WLFI has previously responded to his accusations of opaque blacklisting by insisting it only targets “malicious or high‑risk activity,” and has publicly hinted at meeting Sun “in court,” suggesting the governance dispute is likely to move into regulatory and legal arenas.