Nigel Farage facing calls to return money as as ministers to cap donations from expats, in move that would have outlawed his party’s record-breaking £9m from Thailand-based British businessman
Sir Keir Starmer has announced a temporary ban on cryptocurrency donations to political parties following a government review into political interference, in a major blow to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK .
Sir Keir told MPs the review set out the “stark threats posed by illicit finance” as he hit out at Mr Farage, whose party has accepted a number of crypto donations.
In the last year, Reform received about £12m from the Thai-based British investor Christopher Harborne , as well as a series of smaller donations from overseas.
An independent review into foreign financial influence warned that Iran, Russia and China are trying to “cause harm” to the UK’s democracy.
Foreign interference in the UK is “real and persistent” and the government needs to make it a “far higher” priority, it added.
Sir Keir told MPs at PMQs that the government would “act decisively to protect our democracy; that will include a moratorium on all political donations made through cryptocurrencies.” He added: “I hope that will be welcomed.”
The announcement led to immediate calls for Mr Farage to “return all the crypto donations he’s received from anonymous overseas sources”.
Lib Dem cabinet spokesperson Lisa Smart said: “Reform taking untraceable, secretive crypto-donations to fund their Trump-style politics here in the UK should never have been allowed.
Farage must return all the crypto donations he’s received from anonymous overseas sources or admit he’s happy to let foreign sources of money poison our politics in the UK.”
The report was ordered after Reform UK’s former leader in Wales, Nathan Gill, was jailed for taking bribes to make pro-Russia statements while a member of the European Parliament.
The report also calls for a ban on foreign-funded online political ads, suggested MPs’ trips overseas should be funded only by the government or parliament, and warned of a "potential new threat" from the US.
In a sign of the scale of the problem, the report’s authors warned that social media posts on Scottish independence fell dramatically recently when the Iranian authorities cut off internet service inside the country.
It also urged MPs to cap donations from British nationals living abroad.
Mr Farage was forced to defend the donation from Mr Harborne last year, insisting he “wants nothing from me”.
Former top civil servant Mr Rycroft urged ministers to legislate for a moratorium in the Representation of the People Bill going through parliament.
He wrote that this should be seen not as a “prelude to an outright and permanent ban” but an interlude for regulation to catch up to reality.
“The government should legislate in the Representation of the People Bill to introduce a moratorium on political donations made in crypto assets,” he wrote.
Few parties accept crypto donations, but Reform UK is the most prominent to do so.
Speaking to reporters, Mr Rycroft said he had spoken to Mr Farage’s party while compiling the report.
Asked about the prospect of Reform feeling targeted by the crypto recommendation, he said: “I wasn’t here to look out for the interests of any political party, I was here to look out for the interest of our democratic processes.”
Attempts to use financial influence to infiltrate politics by gaining leverage and sowing division and distrust are not new but “arguably more acute”, Mr Rycroft noted.
He said he was “not pressing the panic button” but “ringing the alarm bell” on the issue and urged the government to “act swiftly” on his recommendations.
Reform UK has also secured a second multimillion-pound donation from Mr Harborne.
Months after he gave the party £9m,he gave an additional £3m donation in November last year, according to the Electoral Commission.
He said: “Reform receives a large, perfectly lawful donation from a British citizen, and Labour responds by rushing through a new law to prohibit him from making such a donation again.
“Rycroft even refers to British citizens as ‘malign actors’ in his report.
This is how fast the machinery of government moves when it wants to protect itself.”
When it comes to other countries, there have been reports that the US government is looking into funding Maga-aligned think tanks in Europe as part of this strategy.
Mr Rycroft said: "You have a national security statement that is explicit about seeking to influence politics in Europe, and that clearly includes the UK."
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