Reform UK Builds Towards £40 Million Election War Chest as 'Billionaires Wait in the Wings' to Back Nigel Farage for PM
Update: 2025-12-04
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Reform UK has received the most donations of any political party by far so far this year according to data released on Thursday by the Electoral Commission.
Over the last quarter Reform UK was the biggest recipient of political donations out of any UK political party by a long way. At a total of £10,293,511, Reform received almost four times the donations of Labour (£2,190,340) and more than twice those of the Conservatives (£4,662,110).
Although Reform had reportedly been struggling to raise funds earlier this year, the £10.2 million takes them one quarter of the way to their stated goal of a £40 million war chest to prepare for the next general election.
Donors to Reform included £490,000 across two donations from the party's treasurer and billionaire property developer Nick Candy. Candy has been charged by the party with the task of leveraging his contacts and experience to fundraise. Earlier this year Candy told the Financial Times that there were several billionaires waiting in the wings to join Reform. At the time, Reform's intake of donations seemed lacklustre and it was reported that they were struggling to fundraise.
One Conservative source told the FT in July that "people would have expected Reform to eat our lunch, but it just hasn't happened", however Reform has now managed to leapfrog the Conservatives in financial terms.
The £10.2 million figure, and the discrepancy between Reform's donations and those of the Conservatives, highlights Reform's increasing dominance over the right-wing of British politics despite having just five MPs.
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
Reform received donations from several ultra-high-net-worth individuals, including former Tory donors, that unlike Candy are not formally part of the party.
The most controversial of these was a £9 million donation from Christopher Harbourne, a businessman who has invested heavily in the cryptocurrency firm Tether. The company has recently come under fire for allegedly being used for money-laundering and sanctions evasion in Russia.
According to the Guardian, The National Crime Agency has spent the past four years investigating a multibillion-dollar scheme that exchanges cash from drug and gun sales in the UK for crypto, with the "vast majority" of funds seized by the NCA and others being issued by Tether.
The scheme has enabled "sanctions evasions and the highest levels of organised crime, including providing money-laundering services to the Russian state", the agency has said.
There is no suggestion of wrongdoing by Harborne.
It was Harbourne that paid £28,000 for Farage to attend Trump's inauguration in January. Farage has recently been courting the cryptocurrency sector, promising he will be their "champion". Harbourne also has interests in aviation fuel and the defence firm QinetiQ.
Other donations included 130,000 from Bassim Haidar, a fintech and telecoms magnate who once advised Amnesty International and the World Economic Forum both of which Farage has railed against. Haidar, a former Conservative donor, has pledged to donate £1 million to Reform.
He gave a further £225,000 of these pledged funds between January and April this year. Haidar told the Telegraph in 2024 that he had "left" Britain and lamented that Labour's abolition of the non-dom tax regime had rendered the country "no longer interesting" for wealthy investors. However, he remains listed at his One Hyde Park flat address in London, meaning he continues to be eligible to donate to the party.
In a sign that right-wing media magnates are also increasingly backing Reform UK, the party also took £50,0...
And support our mission to provide fearless stories about and outside the media system
SUBSCRIBE TODAY
Reform UK has received the most donations of any political party by far so far this year according to data released on Thursday by the Electoral Commission.
Over the last quarter Reform UK was the biggest recipient of political donations out of any UK political party by a long way. At a total of £10,293,511, Reform received almost four times the donations of Labour (£2,190,340) and more than twice those of the Conservatives (£4,662,110).
Although Reform had reportedly been struggling to raise funds earlier this year, the £10.2 million takes them one quarter of the way to their stated goal of a £40 million war chest to prepare for the next general election.
Donors to Reform included £490,000 across two donations from the party's treasurer and billionaire property developer Nick Candy. Candy has been charged by the party with the task of leveraging his contacts and experience to fundraise. Earlier this year Candy told the Financial Times that there were several billionaires waiting in the wings to join Reform. At the time, Reform's intake of donations seemed lacklustre and it was reported that they were struggling to fundraise.
One Conservative source told the FT in July that "people would have expected Reform to eat our lunch, but it just hasn't happened", however Reform has now managed to leapfrog the Conservatives in financial terms.
The £10.2 million figure, and the discrepancy between Reform's donations and those of the Conservatives, highlights Reform's increasing dominance over the right-wing of British politics despite having just five MPs.
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
Reform received donations from several ultra-high-net-worth individuals, including former Tory donors, that unlike Candy are not formally part of the party.
The most controversial of these was a £9 million donation from Christopher Harbourne, a businessman who has invested heavily in the cryptocurrency firm Tether. The company has recently come under fire for allegedly being used for money-laundering and sanctions evasion in Russia.
According to the Guardian, The National Crime Agency has spent the past four years investigating a multibillion-dollar scheme that exchanges cash from drug and gun sales in the UK for crypto, with the "vast majority" of funds seized by the NCA and others being issued by Tether.
The scheme has enabled "sanctions evasions and the highest levels of organised crime, including providing money-laundering services to the Russian state", the agency has said.
There is no suggestion of wrongdoing by Harborne.
It was Harbourne that paid £28,000 for Farage to attend Trump's inauguration in January. Farage has recently been courting the cryptocurrency sector, promising he will be their "champion". Harbourne also has interests in aviation fuel and the defence firm QinetiQ.
Other donations included 130,000 from Bassim Haidar, a fintech and telecoms magnate who once advised Amnesty International and the World Economic Forum both of which Farage has railed against. Haidar, a former Conservative donor, has pledged to donate £1 million to Reform.
He gave a further £225,000 of these pledged funds between January and April this year. Haidar told the Telegraph in 2024 that he had "left" Britain and lamented that Labour's abolition of the non-dom tax regime had rendered the country "no longer interesting" for wealthy investors. However, he remains listed at his One Hyde Park flat address in London, meaning he continues to be eligible to donate to the party.
In a sign that right-wing media magnates are also increasingly backing Reform UK, the party also took £50,0...
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