In 2020 an investigative television program, broadcast on the German TV network
ARD, exposed doping and corruption scandals within the sport. A subsequent investigation into the IWF found that doping – a historic problem within the sport – was exacerbated by systematic governance failures, corruption, and doping cover-ups at the highest level of IWF; with
Tamás Aján, president of IWF from 2000 to 2020, being found guilty by the
Court of Arbitration for Sport of charges relating to tampering, fraudulent conduct and complicity in covering-up years of doping cases. Consequently, as of 2021, weightlifting isn't in the lineup of the 2028 Olympics. There is, nevertheless, a pathway for weightlifting's potential inclusion, if all issues are satisfactorily addressed by the new leadership of IWF before a key meeting of the International Olympic Committee in 2023. The IOC requires the IWF to demonstrate its transition "towards compliance and an effective change of culture", successfully address doping within the sport and "ensure the integrity, robustness, and full independence of its anti-doping programme." In 2020, in response to the scandal, IWF, being temporarily run by interim acting president Ursula Papandrea, initiated the relocation of its headquarters from Aján's home city of Budapest to
Lausanne, Switzerland, where the headquarters of the IOC is also located. In June 2022, a new IWF executive board was elected by IWF's member federations, with the new president Mohammed Hasan Jalood saying he is "dedicated" to "positive change". Weightlifting
is scheduled as part of the 2024 Olympics program in Paris, although with reduced numbers of athletes, weight classes, and events. == Response to Russian invasion of Ukraine ==