An investigation into Nigel Farage has begun over an undeclared £5 million gift received in early 2024.
The probe follows weeks after Farage reversed his stance and announced his candidacy for the July 2024 general election.
The controversy started after the Conservative and Labour parties referred the matter in April, citing mandatory declaration requirements.
The UK Parliamentary Standards Commissioner Daniel Greenberg has formally launched an investigation into Reform UK leader Nigel Farage over an undeclared £5 million gift from cryptocurrency billionaire Christopher Harborne — escalating from the initial referrals made by the Conservative and Labour parties in late April to a full inquiry that now threatens Farage’s parliamentary seat.
The confirmation, reported by The Guardian, means Greenberg has determined there are sufficient grounds to examine whether Farage breached the House of Commons Code of Conduct by not registering the payment, which he received in early 2024 — weeks before reversing his public stance and announcing he would stand for the Clacton seat in the July 2024 general election. As The Crypto Times reported in April, both the Conservative and Labour parties had referred the matter to the Commissioner, arguing the gift fell within mandatory declaration requirements.
The move from referral to formal investigation is a significant procedural escalation — a referral is a request for scrutiny; a launched inquiry signals the Commissioner believes the case warrants full examination.
The Central Question: Personal Security or Political Support?
Farage has maintained that the £5 million ($6.7 million) was a “personal, unconditional gift” intended to cover his lifetime security costs after past incidents, including a milkshake thrown at him during the 2019 European election campaign and what he described as a “horrifying” firebomb attack on his home in early 2025.
“This money was given to me so that I would be safe and secure for the rest of my life,” Farage said. He said he had tried and failed to obtain state-funded protection from the Home Office and believed he would not receive it going forward.
Reform UK’s deputy leader Richard Tice defended the payment on BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg, arguing that Farage was not actively involved in politics when the money was received and that it qualified as an exempt personal gift.
Critics have seized on a timeline inconsistency: the £5 million was received in early 2024, nearly a year before the firebombing incident Farage has used to justify it. Labour chair Anna Turley accused Farage of breaking the rules, describing it as “one rule for Farage and another for everyone else.” Prime Minister Keir Starmer said Farage still has “many questions to answer.”
Under House of Commons rules, MPs must declare any personal benefit exceeding £300 received in the 12 months before entering parliament. The rules explicitly state that such benefits should be registered if there is any doubt about whether they are personal or political in nature.
The Tether Connection
Harborne, who resides in Thailand, holds an estimated 12% stake in Tether, the world’s largest stablecoin issuer with over $151 billion in USDT market capitalization. He has been a major political donor in the UK for years, contributing £10 million to the Brexit Party in 2019 and emerging as the single most consequential financial backer in Reform UK’s history.
Harborne’s total political donations to Reform UK now exceed £22 million — representing roughly two-thirds of all donations the party has received since its foundation. This includes £9 million in 2025 and a further £3 million in March 2026, according to updated Electoral Commission filings and public records. The £5 million personal gift to Farage is separate from and in addition to these party donations, bringing Harborne’s total financial footprint across Farage and Reform UK to approximately £27 million.
Separately, BitMEX co-founder Ben Delo has donated approximately £4 million to Reform UK since the start of 2026, adding to the party’s heavy reliance on crypto-linked funding.
Dual-Track Investigation: Commissioner and Electoral Commission
The investigation is now proceeding on two parallel tracks. Commissioner Greenberg’s inquiry focuses on whether Farage breached the Commons Code of Conduct by failing to declare the gift — a parliamentary standards matter that could result in sanctions ranging from a formal apology to suspension from the House.
Separately, the Electoral Commission is examining whether electoral laws were breached — a broader regulatory question that touches on whether the payment constituted political activity regardless of how it was characterized by Farage and Reform UK. The dual-track nature of the investigation is unusual and reflects the scale and political sensitivity of the case.
Former chair of the Committee on Standards in Public Life Sir Alistair Graham described the case as “unprecedented” in scale, noting that “a breach of this magnitude — involving millions of pounds — is unprecedented” and could lead to “a significant suspension from the House.”
The crypto connections extend to Farage’s personal investments. In April, Farage invested £215,000 in Stack BTC, a London-listed Bitcoin treasury company chaired by former Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng, taking a 6.31% stake through his investment vehicle, Thorn In The Side.
Liberal Democrat MP Daisy Cooper has asked the Financial Conduct Authority to investigate whether Farage’s public crypto promotion—including describing cryptocurrency as “the ultimate freedom”—constitutes potential market abuse or conflict of interest, drawing comparisons to what she called Trump’s “crypto playbook.”
The pattern — receiving millions from a Tether stakeholder, publicly promoting crypto, investing personally in a Bitcoin treasury company, and calling cryptocurrency “the ultimate freedom” — has made Farage arguably the most crypto-entangled politician in UK parliamentary history. Whether this entanglement crosses legal or ethical lines is now the subject of at least three separate inquiries: the Standards Commissioner, the Electoral Commission, and the FCA complaint.
UK Government Moves to Ban Crypto Political Donations
The controversy has accelerated a broader policy shift. In March 2026, the UK government imposed an immediate moratorium on cryptocurrency donations to political parties, citing the Rycroft review’s warning that digital assets could be used to channel foreign money into UK politics. The ban covers donations of any size and will be written into the Representation of the People Bill with criminal penalties for non-compliance.
The ban was widely interpreted as a direct response to the Harborne-Farage-Reform funding pipeline. Constitutional experts have noted that Harborne’s Thailand residency raises additional questions about whether crypto-sourced political funding from overseas individuals can be adequately monitored under existing UK electoral law.
What Happens Next
Commissioner Greenberg’s investigation has no fixed public timeline. He will examine the evidence, take submissions from Farage and other parties, and issue a finding. If the Commissioner finds a particularly serious breach, Farage could face suspension from the House of Commons. A suspension of 10 days or more would trigger a recall petition under the Recall of MPs Act 2015, potentially forcing Farage to fight a by-election for his Clacton seat—the constituency he won on his eighth attempt in July 2024.
The investigation arrives at a moment of peak political momentum for Reform UK, which won more than 1,400 council seats in recent local elections across England and performed strongly in Welsh and Scottish elections. Farage described the results as “a historic shift in British politics.” A suspension or recall petition would be a significant disruption to that trajectory — and would make Farage’s crypto connections a central issue in any by-election campaign.
Disclaimer: The information researched and reported by The Crypto Times is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional financial advice. Investing in crypto assets involves significant risk due to market volatility. Always Do Your Own Research (DYOR) and consult with a qualified Financial Advisor before making any investment decisions.



















