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Will it ever become a requirement for council members to submit a declaration of interest?

useranaelleltd
5 years ago

Hello all,

As part of my work on a comprehensive guide to Polkadot-JS Apps, I have been looking at the official documentation on the Council as a governance body of Polkadot/Kusama. I have found that this documentation mostly consists of academic research and technical explainers. I haven't found any resources addressing the notion of conflict of interest, even though this is a rather common issue experienced within governance systems.

In the case of Kusama and Polkadot, the questions to be answered would be: what happens when council members are acting as advisors for a project and that project submits a Treasury proposal? What should council members do when someone they know personally or have previously worked with makes a request for Treasury funds via bounties or tips? Should they comment formally on their involvement with the project/person and vote? Should the commentary and/or abstaining be left to their own discretion?

There doesn't seem to be any practical forward-guidance on this matter, which could be detrimental to the whole system in two ways:

  1. Perception of a lack of transparency: if there is no declaration of interest required prior to voting for proposals, council members might later realise that they had some relevant information that they could have shared in a timely manner but didn't. However, if members of the community come across that same information further down the line and believe that it had the potential to sway the outcome of the vote at the time of the proposal yet wasn't publicly discussed, they will eventually start casting a doubt on the whole governance process.

  2. Obstacle to council candidacy: if community members are already involved in successful projects but also interested in advocating for ecosystem initiatives at large, joining the council makes practical sense. However, given that their influence is already established in the community and that they are not required to declare their interest, their joining the council could very well be perceived by the community as an attempt to gain more power to serve their own interests, which could eventually dissuade them from becoming candidates.

The primary purpose of a declaration of (conflict of) interest isn't to police or run inquiries on members of governance bodies. Instead, it is used to encourage collective discussion, mindful participation and ethical self-reflection. It seems to me that having council members declare their interest prior to voting on proposals would be welcome at this point in time where the ecosystem is growing and in need of expertise, funding and advice; all 3 being scarce resources across the board.

If there are more publications about Polkadot/Kusama Council and governance available out there that I have missed, please do share your links and commentary, as I am really interested in your take on this matter as a community.

Many thanks,
Anaelle.

Comments (5)

5 years ago

Any comment on this matter, councillors?

5 years ago

edit: deleted mostly irrelevant long post

Yeah, there have certainly been brief discussions in the past around these topics, and there are no inked standards anywhere.

But a summary of past discussions:

"can [councilor] vote for their own treasury proposals?" - probably not, but "you are on council because people trust your judgement to begin with"

  • personally I had left Polkadot council prior to making a proposal to it, (and didn't care to rejoin) but for the most part, councilors remain on council and just avoid voting for proposals they directly benefit from - I also personally avoid voting for proposals for teams I have been guiding to make a proposal to begin with - but as you say, there is no standard to declaring these interests if there are any.

"can [councilor] endorse their own tips?" - yes, but if you add a tip as a member of council, there is no finder assigned, so they councilors aren't "finders" when they report tips.

imo councillors should declare their affiliations, employment relationships, consultation relationships, etc. but there is no mechanism to enforce this. Folks (myself included) can claim they are not participating in any official capacity and are motivated entirely on their own, but these relationships certainly still hold influence over your behaviour towards projects applying to treasury and using the network [especially if they are potentially competitive with you].

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