New people's initiative demands Swiss National Bank hold bitcoin as part of national reserves, committee begins collecting 100,000 signatures for public vote.

"The primary aim is to initiate a debate."
"Bitcoin did not meet the requirements for currency reserves."
The clock is ticking on a monetary revolution. As of Tuesday, the race for Switzerland's financial future has officially begun with the publication of the 'Bitcoin Initiative' in the Federal Gazette. Campaigners have launched a bold offensive to force the Swiss National Bank (SNB) to integrate Bitcoin into its national assets, a move that would fundamentally alter the definition of state reserves. The committee, led by internet pioneer Yves Bennaïm, now faces a critical deadline: they must collect 100,000 valid signatures within the next 18 months to bring this radical proposal to a public vote.
This is not merely a suggestion; it is a demand for sovereignty. Titled 'For a financially strong, sovereign and responsible Switzerland,' the initiative seeks to bypass traditional banking hesitation by taking the issue directly to the people. If successful, Switzerland would become the first major economy to constitutionally mandate the holding of decentralized cryptocurrency alongside traditional gold reserves, signaling a dramatic shift in global finance.
The initiative strikes at the very heart of Swiss financial law. The proposal demands a constitutional amendment explicitly stating that the SNB must build up currency reserves from its earnings, and critically, that these reserves must include both gold and Bitcoin. While the text leaves the specific percentage of Bitcoin undefined, the mandate is unambiguous: the digital asset must sit equal to the precious metal in the national vault.
This strategic ambiguity regarding the 'how much' provides flexibility, but the 'what' is non-negotiable. By anchoring Bitcoin in the constitution, the initiative aims to future-proof the Swiss economy against inflation and fiat currency devaluation. Yves Bennaïm has stated that the primary aim is to 'initiate a debate,' but the legal machinery set in motion this week suggests a goal far more concrete than mere discussion. This is a push for a diversified, digital-first balance sheet that challenges the status quo of the last century.
The initiative faces a formidable and historically skeptical opponent: the Swiss National Bank itself. The SNB has long maintained a conservative stance on digital assets, prioritizing stability over speculation. Just two years ago, then-President Thomas Jordan declared unequivocally that Bitcoin 'did not meet the requirements' for currency reserves. This new campaign confronts that conservatism head-on, forcing the institution to grapple with a reality it has previously dismissed.
This clash represents a significant friction point between grassroots financial innovation and institutional caution. While the SNB focuses on managing inflation and interest rates through traditional mechanisms, the 'Bitcoin Initiative' argues that excluding the world's premier cryptocurrency is a dereliction of duty. The central bank may soon find itself defending its exclusion of Bitcoin not just in boardrooms, but in the court of public opinion, as the signature collection gains momentum across the cantons.
While the central bank hesitates, the Swiss private sector is already sprinting toward a crypto-native future. A staggering 25% of Swiss banks now offer cryptocurrency services or have concrete plans to do so, proving that the financial industry has largely shed its fear of digital assets. The market has spoken, and it is overwhelmingly in favor of integration. This disconnect between a forward-thinking commercial banking sector and a reticent central bank creates a tension that this initiative seeks to resolve.
Switzerland is already recognized globally as a 'Crypto Nation,' but this initiative seeks to elevate that title from a commercial slogan to a constitutional reality. If the campaigners succeed in securing the 100,000 signatures, the subsequent vote will force every Swiss citizen to decide whether their national wealth should remain tied solely to traditional fiat and gold, or expand into the digital frontier. The debate is no longer theoretical; it is here, and it is urgent.