Liberland has just concluded its latest congressional elections, ushering in a new cohort of legislators who will guide the governance of the world’s first libertarian microstate. In a political landscape that values decentralization, voluntary governance, and radical innovation, the new Congress reflects an extraordinary confluence of minds from across the globe—entrepreneurs, jurists, technologists, humanitarians—each bringing unique tools to further the Liberland project.
These are not career politicians, nor bureaucrats shaped by statism. They are pioneers in their respective fields, chosen not to command, but to serve the principle that government must be consensual, minimal, and aligned with individual sovereignty.
Tariq Javaid Abbasi
A distinguished figure in both the business and diplomatic worlds, Abbasi has served as Chair of Westar Capital Group and as Deputy Lieutenant of Greater London. His humanitarian efforts span continents, with a focus on interfaith dialogue, philanthropy, and conflict resolution. His entry into Liberland’s Congress signals a push for enhanced international outreach and soft power diplomacy rooted in voluntarism and peaceful exchange.
Evan Luthra
One of the most prominent tech entrepreneurs of his generation, Luthra is a double Forbes 30 Under 30 honoree and was named Crypto Entrepreneur of the Year in 2024. With deep involvement in AI, Web3, and venture capital, his presence introduces a decisive orientation toward emerging technologies and digital sovereignty. For Liberland, his influence could mark a turning point in making the microstate a nucleus for global crypto-capital and decentralized infrastructure.
Michal Ptáčník
Trained in law and jurisprudence, Ptáčník’s intellectual background in international legal theory and alternative governance systems places him in a strategic position to reimagine statehood. His work aligns directly with Liberland’s foundational premise: that law should emerge from reason and contract, not coercion. Expect a focus on legal innovation, digital identity, and the redefinition of sovereignty.
Navid Saberin
A cosmopolitan thinker fluent in commerce, sinology, and computer science, Saberin brings intellectual depth and technical sophistication. His libertarian commitments are grounded in Bitcoin philosophy and free market ethics. With broad interdisciplinary experience and a polyglot’s cultural agility, he represents the type of borderless citizen that Liberland aims to attract and empower.
Justin Sun
Best known as the founder of TRON and for acquiring BitTorrent, Sun is a towering figure in the blockchain world. Educated at Peking University and the University of Pennsylvania, and with prior experience at Ripple Labs, Sun’s legislative role in Liberland is a major development. His participation signals that Liberland is not merely symbolic: it is becoming a serious node in the international crypto network, blending governance with protocol.
Dorian Stern Vukotic
The first individual to settle physically on Liberland’s territory, Vukotic is both symbol and architect of its digital foundations. As tech lead for the Liberland blockchain team, he has played a pivotal role in building the technological stack that undergirds Liberland’s governance model. His transhumanist interests, including cryonics and radical life extension, make him an emblem of the Promethean spirit that animates the Liberland experiment.
Karnika E. Yashwant (KEY)
With over 11 years of experience in blockchain, KEY is a rare hybrid of marketer, builder, and philosopher. He has led global campaigns that have altered public narratives and driven technological adoption. A committed libertarian, his strategic thinking and communication prowess are assets not just for Liberland’s brand, but for the broader libertarian movement. He brings the conviction that freedom must be marketed with the same precision as any other revolutionary product.
A Congress Without Precedent
What sets this Congress apart is not merely the caliber of its members, but the ontological break it represents with traditional statehood. In most countries, elections reproduce power structures; in Liberland, they are a conscious re-imagining of them. The new Congress embodies a shift from coercive hierarchy to voluntary association, from territorial monopoly to permissionless experimentation.
Each member is a node in a decentralized network of governance, chosen not by partisanship or ideology, but by their capacity to contribute to a radically new form of statecraft—one that seeks to answer the 21st century’s political question: Can liberty govern itself?
With this new Congress, Liberland doesn’t merely survive. It advances. Boldly, creatively, and uncompromisingly.