A total of 243 lawmakers voted against the veto, while 191 voted to uphold it.
Crypto News
Poland's parliament has failed for the second time to override a presidential veto on a crypto regulation bill. The country remains the only EU member state that has not yet implemented the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation, known as MiCA.
President Karol Nawrocki issued the original veto, citing concerns about excessive regulation, limited transparency, and the risk of placing undue burdens on small businesses. Finance Minister Andrzej Domański has argued the opposite position, warning that the absence of clear rules exposes both consumers and businesses to fraud. He reportedly described the unregulated environment as an "El Dorado for fraudsters."
This is the second time the government has been unable to advance the bill. Parliament first failed to override the presidential veto in December and quickly reintroduced a new version of the legislation. Critics said the revised draft was nearly identical to the original. Nawrocki vetoed it again in February this year, saying at the time that "a wrong law that passed a hundred times still remains a wrong law."
The dispute has drawn in Zonda, Poland's largest crypto exchange, which has reportedly lobbied against the bill. Tusk accused Zonda of ties to illicit funding, citing intelligence reports he said connect the platform's origins to Russian criminal networks. The claims escalated the tension between the government and the country's most prominent crypto firm.
Zonda CEO Przemyslaw Kral rejected the accusations publicly on X. He called the attempts to link him and the company to the political dispute "as absurd as they are harmful to the Polish innovation market." Kral added that he is "compelled to take appropriate legal steps to protect my personal rights."
Kral also addressed a separate issue regarding a crypto wallet reportedly holding $330 million. He said he does not control access to that wallet and that it remained under the authority of former CEO Sylwester Suszek before Suszek disappeared in 2022. Poland has not announced a new legislative timeline, and the regulatory standoff shows no signs of immediate resolution.
