Uniswap’s leadership stunned the market this week with a sweeping governance overhaul that blends operational restructuring with long-delayed economic changes to the UNI token. The centerpiece: activating protocol fees and redirecting them toward UNI burns while phasing out Uniswap Labs’ own interface fees. Traders reacted instantly, UNI briefly exploded almost 50%, but the real shockwaves came from Washington and the regulatory community rather than the price chart.
A Former SEC Insider Questions Uniswap’s Motives
Amanda Fischer, who previously worked alongside SEC Chair Gary Gensler, delivered one of the most pointed critiques yet. She argued that the overhaul exposes a pattern of “selective decentralization,” claiming Uniswap invoked decentralization when it offered legal shelter, only to pivot back toward centralized control once the pressure faded.
Her comments revived a fierce and familiar debate: is decentralization a principle, or a talking point used when convenient?
Hayden Adams Reopens Old Wounds From the FTX Era
Uniswap founder Hayden Adams didn’t just reject Fischer’s interpretation, he brought back one of the most contentious chapters in U.S. crypto history. Adams pointed out that Fischer supported the regulatory stance that nearly allowed FTX’s 2022 lobbying push to succeed. That campaign aimed to license DeFi front-ends and reintroduce intermediaries into a system designed to avoid them.
You tried to hand a centralized monopoly on crypto exchange in the US to FTX
I built the largest decentralized marketplace in the world
And she says decentralization isn’t one of my values?
This crashout is insane lmao
Not everything you read on twitter is true Amanda https://t.co/wJDJXWz3rb
— Hayden Adams 🦄 (@haydenzadams) November 14, 2025
By invoking that episode, Adams reframed the conversation: the issue, he argued, isn’t today’s fee switch, it’s the lingering frustration over how close Washington came to gatekeeping DeFi in favor of centralized exchanges.
Uniswap’s leadership stunned the market this week with a sweeping governance overhaul that blends operational restructuring with long-delayed economic changes to the UNI token. The centerpiece: activating protocol fees and redirecting them toward UNI burns while phasing out Uniswap Labs’ own interface fees. Traders reacted instantly, UNI briefly exploded almost 50%, but the real shockwaves came from Washington and the regulatory community rather than the price chart.
What the Governance Package Actually Changes
While the argument on X took center stage, the governance proposal itself is substantial. The plan consolidates Uniswap Labs and the Uniswap Foundation into a unified structure and introduces an economic redesign where protocol activity fuels automatic UNI reductions. The Foundation will distribute its remaining ~$100 million in grants and then dissolve. A new “Growth Budget” under a service agreement will fund future development.
Supporters view this as overdue streamlining. Critics are uneasy about collapsing separate entities into a single operational hub.
A Deeper Debate About the Last Five Years of DeFi
The tension isn’t really about fees. It’s about DeFi’s identity.
For some, decentralization is validated by surviving regulatory crackdowns with open infrastructure intact. For others, a project that embraces centralization when revenue is at stake undermines the entire premise.
Fischer and Adams weren’t trading governance notes, they were fighting over the story of DeFi itself.

