DiscoverByline Times Audio ArticlesKeir Starmer Is Setting a Trap for Nigel Farage With Foreign Interference Inquiry
Keir Starmer Is Setting a Trap for Nigel Farage With Foreign Interference Inquiry

Keir Starmer Is Setting a Trap for Nigel Farage With Foreign Interference Inquiry

Update: 2025-12-17
Share

Description

Read our Digital & Print Editions

And support our mission to provide fearless stories about and outside the media system

SUBSCRIBE TODAY

The announcement that Keir Starmer's Government is launching a review of "foreign financial interference" in British politics didn't make much of a splash in today's paper, but it may turn out to have been one of the most significant political for moments in this Parliament.

For years the Labour party has been under pressure to take the issues of foreign interference, and dark money in our politics, more seriously.

However, a nervousness inside Downing Street about being seen to question the Brexit result, as well as a resistance to take any steps that might also harm Labour's own funding streams, has meant that little so far has been done.

Even after reports spread last year that the far-right US billionaire Elon Musk was considering bankrolling Reform UK, via his UK companies, Downing Street hesitated to do anything about it.

That now finally appears to be changing. Labour sources who are close to Number 10 say that the conviction of Reform's former Welsh leader for taking pro-Russian bribes, and the record breaking £9 million Reform donation from a Thailand-based crypto investor have combined to "galvanise" Starmer into taking action.

Crypto Investor Donates £9 Million to Reform UK as Nigel Farage Plugs His Company and Tells Industry 'I Am Your Champion'

The Reform leader recently used media interviews to back Christopher Harborne's company while promising to cut taxes and regulations on crypto firms

Adam Bienkov

The realisation, as one Labour MP put it to Byline Times, that foreign financial interference could pose both an "existential threat to democracy" and an "existential threat to their jobs" has finally spurred Number 10 into action.

The review, which will be led by the Former Permanent Secretary at the Brexit department, Philip Rycroft, is just the first step in what is likely to see the Government taking significant action to close at least some of the glaring loopholes allowing foreign interference in our politics.

As things stand it is remarkably easy, and cheap, for hostile foreign actors to interfere in our politics. As a recent sting operation by Democracy for Sale exposed, it only takes a little bit of money and a little bit of access to gain real influence over our politics.

Unlike in the corporate world, where there are strictly-enforced protocols against corruption, there are only a few very weak guardrails preventing malicious actors gaining influence.

One good example of this is the All Party Parliamentary Group system, whereby foreign governments are effectively able to buy significant influence among elected parliamentarians for relatively small amounts of money. By hosting events inside Parliament and paying for MPs to visit their host countries, foreign governments and corporations can buy huge amounts of access with very little scrutiny.

Similar access is also gained through the world of opaquely funded think tanks, which have become a hugely prominent force inside Westminster and at party conferences, despite there being little obligation on these groups to disclose where their funding ultimately comes from.

The checks and balances are only slightly better when it comes to the direct funding of our politics. Under current rules, only British citizens and entities can donate to a political party. Yet in reality this rule can be easily bypassed by funnelling money through a UK company, as Musk was reportedly considering. These restrictions were even further loosened under the last Conservative government, which allowed people who had been living abroad for more than 15 years to continue donating to UK political parties. The political funding watchdog, the Electoral Commission, an already fairly toothless body, was further enfeebled under the last Govenrment.

However, it has been the onset of crypto donations that poses perhaps the most significant new threat to o...
Comments 
In Channel
loading
00:00
00:00
x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

Keir Starmer Is Setting a Trap for Nigel Farage With Foreign Interference Inquiry

Keir Starmer Is Setting a Trap for Nigel Farage With Foreign Interference Inquiry

Adam Bienkov