Farage referred to watchdog over £5m ‘gift’ from Thai-based British crypto billionaire

Reform UK leader describes ‘huge danger’ of job

Farage referred to watchdog over £5m ‘gift’ from Thai-based British crypto billionaire
Farage referred to watchdog over £5m ‘gift’ from Thai-based British crypto billionaire Photo: The Independent

Reform UK leader describes ‘huge danger’ of job
Nigel Farage has been referred to the Parliamentary standards watchdog after he admitted he received a £5m donation from a Thai-based billionaire to bolster his security.

The Reform UK leader said he received a seven-figure donation from Christopher Harborne , a British national living in Thailand who helped bankroll Brexit, back in 2024.

Mr Farage has been criticised for failing to declare the latest donation, which was given weeks before he declared he would run in the general election.

The Conservatives have now referred him to the Parliamentary standards watchdog over the gift, which they say should have been reported to the Commons previously.

“This money was given to me so that I would be safe and secure for the rest of my life,” Mr Farage told The Telegraph .

“I’m very much on my own and will be for the rest of my life, and I have to face up to that grim reality.

“Christopher is an ardent supporter who is deeply concerned for my safety.”
Mr Harborne’s donations to Mr Farage and Reform UK have been a subject of particular controversy for the party, after he gifted it a record-breaking £9 million donation last August and a further £3m this year.

Mr Harborne’s separate £5m gift for Mr Farage was not subject to tax or declared to the parliamentary authorities as it did not count as a political donation, according to The Telegraph .

But Labour Party chairwoman Anna Turley described the donation as “the latest alarming example of Farage and his MPs believing there is one rule for them and another for everyone else”.

Conservative Party chairman Kevin Hollinrake said Mr Farage would have been obliged to report all political donations and gifts he had received during the previous 12 months as a new MP.

“He did not,” he said.

“The Conservatives are therefore today referring Nigel Farage to the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner.”
The Reform leader is regularly heckled while out in public, and famously had a milkshake thrown on him while campaigning in his now-constituency Clacton-on-Sea ahead of the general election in 2024.

He said that while police investigated the attack, a suspect had yet to be identified.

MP safety has been a highly debated topic in recent years, with calls for action and further security growing following the murder of Jo Cox in 2016 and Sir David Amess in 2021.

“I’m acutely aware of the love for me, but equally the levels of antipathy that exist,” Mr Farage said.

“I also had to write off a car once because it was attacked by protesters when I was in it.

“I would rather not be discussing any of this, but I am having to because someone has got hold of material about my private finances, which is outrageous, and which I believe was illegally obtained.”
Mr Farage also described the online threats he received, claiming he had reported them to the police but received no response.

He added: “There is also the online threat, with people encouraging the use of violence against me, which we have reported to the police several times with no response that I can discern whatsoever and the pretty much point-blank refusal of the British state to help me.”
The Independent has contacted Reform UK for a comment.

The Guardian reported that Mr Farage received the gift from the billionaire weeks before announcing he would run for Clacton-on-Sea, and was therefore not required to declare it to the Electoral Commission.

But Reform disputed this account, saying Mr Farage announced he would not stand as an MP after receiving the money, then later changed his mind.

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Source: This article was originally published by The Independent

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