August 05, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
CoinDesk 20 Performance Update: AAVE Declines 2.1% as Index Trades Lower Bitcoin Treasury Firm Semler Scientific Still Has 3X Upside: Benchmark BounceBit Adds Franklin Templeton Tokenized Fund for Treasury-Backed Yield Strategies Aptos-Backed Decibel Unveils On-Chain Trading Platform With CEX Speed Solana Treasury Company Upexi Surpasses 2M in SOL Holdings Mixed Signals as ETFs Bleed Millions, Bitcoin, Ether Rise: Crypto Daybook Americas Capital B Buys 62 BTC for $7.13M, Boosting Holdings to 2,075 BTC Bitcoin treasuries add 630 BTC while ETFs shed $300M as price ranges BlackRock leads record $465M spot Ether ETF Monday exodus Base Network Suffers 1st Downtime Since Debut, Halts Operations for 29 Minutes

Czech Government Survives No-Confidence Vote Over $45M Bitcoin Donation

The Czech government has weathered a political storm this week, surviving a no-confidence vote triggered by a $45 million bitcoin payment from a convicted criminal.

The scandal has rocked Prime Minister Petr Fiala’s administration months before national elections, Reuters reports.

The payment of 468 bitcoin was made to the state by a man previously jailed for running a darknet drug marketplace called Sheep Marketplace.

The donation was accepted by then-Justice Minister Pavel Blazek, who later resigned amid the backlash, on behalf of the government. The bitcoin was sold for roughly 1 billion Czech koruna, worth around $45 million.

Opposition party ANO, which leads polls ahead of the October vote, filed a no-confidence motion and accused the ruling coalition of potentially aiding in the laundering of illicit assets, as the source of the BTC is unclear.

Critics say the government should have involved prosecutors or police instead of accepting potentially tainted crypto funds. After two days of debate, the motion failed in the lower house, where Fiala’s coalition retains a majority.

Still, Blazek insisted he acted legally in accepting the donation, which amounted to about 30% of crypto found on the man’s returned devices.

The donor’s motives remain unclear. The case shook the government of a country whose central bank earlier this year approved a proposal to study bitcoin as a reserve asset. Czech National Bank chief Ales Michl has even said bitcoin is not to be “lumped together” with crypto.

Polymarket traders are currently seeing the main opposition party, ANO, win the parliamentary election in October. Perceived odds of that outcome are currently at 92%, while Blazek’s ODS party’s chances stand at just 6%.

This post was originally published on this site

Please enter Coingecko Free Api Key to get this plugin works