TL;DR
Reform UK, led by Nigel Farage, is gaining traction with anti-immigration rhetoric while its finances reveal a global network of international backers. Key donor Christopher Harborne, a crypto investor from Thailand, highlights the party's financial ties beyond the UK.
The far-right Reform UK party, led by the firebrand populist Nigel Farage, is on the rise, doubling down on calls for tougher border controls and anti-immigration rhetoric. But a look at its finances tells a different story, with money flowing across borders.
While Reform UK says it aims to strengthen the rule of law by prioritising parliamentary sovereignty, cutting immigration, and reducing the influence of international bodies, many of its financial backers, political relationships and ideological allies extend beyond the United Kingdom and into international networks.
Within this network is a small number of individual donors, including its largest backer, Thailand-based crypto investor Christopher Harborne.
Farage himself is a global networker.
In December, he flew to Abu Dhabi at the expense of the United Arab Emirates to attend events and meet officials, despite building a political brand centred on opposition to immigration from regions such as the Middle East.
Are these payments legal?
The UK political finance system allows unlimited donations on the condition of openness, Sam Power, an expert in political financing, electoral regulation and corruption at the University of Bristol, told Al Jazeera, noting that “anybody can donate as much as they want as long as they’re permissible”.
While transparency was meant to balance this freedom, in practice, with opaque donations, gifts, and weak lobbying rules undermining scrutiny, the system is “no longer fit for purpose in British electoral law”, he said.
Duncan Hames, director of policy, Transparency International UK, said in a statement that British democracy is becoming “a plaything for the super-rich”.
“Political parties are growing ever more dependent on a tiny number of mega-donors, and the impact of that money on our politics is clear: it buys privileged access, political influence, and even seats in the House of Lords,” he said.
Donations have long been a function of the British political system, Power explained, but what Reform UK has done is that it has “supercharged” the scale.
“British politics has always had a bit of a representation problem, in the sense that a small number of wealthy people have an outsized influence, but we have never seen the number this small and the money this big,” Hames said.
Let’s take a deeper look at Reform UK’s global network.
Donations from abroad
Reform UK relies heavily on donations, about two-thirds of which come from wealthy individuals.
At the heart of this set-up sits Harborne, a British-Thai billionaire businessman who is currently the largest single donor to a UK political party in history, having contributed more than 22 million pounds ($30m) to Reform.