The Ethereum Foundation (EF) is facing a period of significant internal transition, with at least eight senior staff members departing throughout 2026 as the organization implements a new “Lean Ethereum” strategy. While the exits have spanned several months, five of these high-profile departures occurred in May 2026 alone, triggering an intense debate within the developer community regarding the foundation’s stability and future transparency. These changes involve core figures in the “Protocol Cluster,” the vital group responsible for the research and coordination of the Ethereum base layer.
The wave of exits has raised questions among prominent community figures about the organization’s evolving leadership and communication practices. Crypto commentator Andy, co-founder of the Rollup podcast, and event organizer Joon Ian Wong have both voiced concerns on X regarding the lack of clear rationale behind the reshuffling. The Foundation, a Switzerland-based nonprofit, has traditionally maintained a loose, decentralized structure to preserve network neutrality, but some argue this model is clashing with the needs of an ecosystem that handles hundreds of billions of dollars in assets.
This internal shakeup is taking place as Ether enters rare accumulation phase amid shifting market conditions. The Foundation recently published a new organizational mandate to accompany its strategic pivot. While the organization has not released a formal briefing on the collective departures, individual staff members have cited various personal and professional reasons for their exits, ranging from new family commitments to a desire to return to hands-on product development in sectors like artificial intelligence.
Key departures from the Protocol Cluster and leadership
The most notable leadership change occurred earlier this year when Co-Executive Director Tomasz Stańczak announced his departure on February 13, 2026. Stańczak, who had been in the role for approximately 11 months, officially left at the end of February to focus on AI and agentic systems. He expressed confidence in the Foundation’s current roadmap, suggesting his departure was a natural “passing of the baton.” Bastian Aue, the former chief of staff, has since stepped in as interim co-Executive Director alongside Hsiao-Wei Wang.
May 2026 saw a concentration of exits from the research and architecture wings of the EF. Carl Beek, a researcher with a seven-year tenure, announced on May 18 that he would leave on May 29 to spend time with his family. Beek was a central figure in Ethereum’s history, contributing to the early design of the Beacon Chain and the network’s historic transition to proof-of-stake. His exit represents a substantial loss of institutional knowledge for the group responsible for improving network throughput.
On the same day, researcher Julian Ma also announced his departure after four years. Ma’s contributions included designing network economics and co-authoring EIP-7805 for censorship resistance. He notably led the launch of the Fast Confirmation Rule, which reduced bridging times between Layer 1 and Layer 2 to just 13 seconds. Both Ma and Senior Solutions Architect Pablo Voorvaart, who left on May 20, indicated they are moving toward entrepreneurial product work and “creating new products” outside the Foundation.
Balancing decentralization with organizational stability
The debate surrounding these departures highlights a fundamental tension in Ethereum’s governance. Proponents of the current “Lean Ethereum” approach see it as a way to streamline operations and prevent a concentration of power. However, critics worry that the loss of veteran researchers could slow down critical protocol upgrades at a time when the narrowing window of crypto utility demands rapid technical evolution. These researchers are often the primary stewards of complex upgrades like zero-knowledge proof systems and consensus mechanisms.
Despite the high turnover, Foundation co-founder Vitalik Buterin remains focused on long-term technical security. He recently advocated for the use of AI-assisted “formal verification” to secure critical internet infrastructure. This process uses mathematically verified software to confirm that code behaves exactly as intended, potentially reversing the trend of smart contract exploits that have cost the industry millions. Buterin suggested that this technology could be particularly beneficial for the Ethereum infrastructure currently being managed by the Protocol Cluster.
Future security challenges and quantum threats
The leadership transition comes just as external threats to the protocol’s underlying cryptography are gaining more attention. According to a report from Wall Street bank Citi (C), breakthroughs in quantum computing are accelerating the timeline for potential risks to digital assets. Analyst Alex Saunders warned that while large-scale attacks are a medium-term concern, the pace of hardware progress warrants closer attention from protocol designers and investors alike.
Citi’s analysis indicates that current cryptographic systems, including the public-key cryptography used by both Bitcoin and Ethereum, are theoretically vulnerable to quantum attackers who could derive private keys from exposed data. These experts estimate that roughly one-third of the circulating supply of certain digital assets could be at risk. This underscores the importance of the Foundation’s research into post-quantum cryptography, an area that Buterin identified as a prime candidate for machine-checkable mathematical proofs.
While the Ethereum Foundation moves forward under interim leadership, the community is watching closely to see if the “Lean Ethereum” strategy can maintain the network’s momentum. The ability to recruit and retain high-level researchers will be crucial as the protocol faces these emerging technical hurdles. For now, the organization remains focused on its decentralized mission, even as its internal structure undergoes its most significant transformation in years.
