Despite voters in Graubünden and Valais rejecting previous Olympic projects in referendums, Swiss Olympic is moving forward with a bid for the 2038 Winter Games without a popular vote. This strategy is causing controversy and raising questions about whether the bid goes against the will of the people.

"Games à la Suisse"
"The timetable set by the International Olympic Committee leaves no room for a federal referendum."
Swiss Olympic is rolling the dice on a 2038 Winter Games bid, effectively bypassing the ballot box in a move that stuns political observers. Despite a clear track record of public resistance, the organization is pushing forward without a federal vote. The history is undeniable: voters in Graubünden and Valais emphatically rejected Olympic projects in 2013, 2017, and 2018. Yet, Swiss Olympic argues that these localized rejections are a poor barometer for a national initiative.
This audacious strategy risks a direct collision with Switzerland’s cherished tradition of direct democracy. By advancing the proposal without securing prior public consent, officials are navigating a political minefield. The spectre of past failures looms large; every previous attempt crumbled when costs and risks were concentrated in single cantons, triggering immediate local backlash. Now, Swiss Olympic is betting that a lack of a federal referendum will allow the project to gain momentum before the public can have its say, a maneuver that critics are already labeling a circumvention of the popular will.
Concentrated risk is out; national distribution is in. Swiss Olympic’s new battle plan, dubbed "Games à la Suisse," represents a radical departure from the failed single-host models of the past. The organization asserts that previous referendums failed specifically because individual regions—Graubünden and Valais—refused to shoulder the colossal financial burden alone. This new concept decentralizes the Games, spreading responsibilities and infrastructure usage across the entire country.
By leveraging existing facilities nationwide, the bid aims to slash construction costs and environmental impact, addressing two of the primary drivers of public skepticism. However, this decentralized approach is untested waters. While it theoretically dilutes the risk for any single canton, it complicates the logistical and political landscape. Swiss Olympic is banking on the idea that a shared national burden will be more palatable than a regional one, but without a nationwide vote to confirm this theory, they are flying blind into a storm of potential public scrutiny.
Twelve months. That is the unforgiving deadline set by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) for a full candidature submission, a timeline that Swiss Olympic President Ruth Metzler-Arnold claims leaves "no room" for a federal referendum. The organization argues that the bureaucratic machinery of a national vote simply cannot move fast enough to meet the IOC’s demands. Consequently, Switzerland is on track to submit its application without asking its citizens if they actually want the Games.
This creates a scenario where cantonal referendums, if they happen at all, would likely occur only after the IOC has already awarded the Games. Critics view this sequence as presenting voters with a fait accompli—a done deal that is difficult to reverse. Swiss Olympic rejects this characterization, insisting the process has been transparent from the outset. However, the optics of committing the nation to a global mega-event before securing a democratic mandate is a high-risk strategy that could fuel resentment rather than national pride.
Not a single cent of public money can cover a potential deficit. In a dramatic ultimatum, the viability of the entire 2038 project now hinges on the private sector. Unlike previous bids where the state was expected to provide a safety net, the current proposal mandates that any deficit guarantee must come exclusively from private backers. This is the bid's critical fail-safe—and its biggest vulnerability.
Swiss Olympic has conceded that without this private guarantee secured by the end of the year, no application can be submitted. The clock is ticking for organizers to find investors willing to underwrite a multi-billion franc event known for cost overruns. If they fail to lock in these private guarantees, the bid dies before it even reaches the IOC. This financial firewall is designed to appease taxpayers, but finding private entities willing to absorb the unlimited liability of an Olympic deficit is a staggering challenge that remains unmet.