Nigel Farage has enjoyed a prosperous few years taking his Reform U.K. party to the top of public opinion polls, but questions about one pesky financial gift have unsettled the typically cool and confident firebrand.Crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne, a Brit currently based in Thailand, gave Farage a whopping £5 million (about $6.6 million) gift in 2024, just before the Reform leader announced his successful campaign to return to parliament as the member for Clacton.Newly elected members of the British Parliament are required to report benefits or financial transactions from the prior 12 months that could reasonably be considered related to political activities. Farage did not report the gift, and has maintained from the get-go that the lump sum he received from Harborne was a no-strings-attached present.
Don’t ask him about it, though, or he might get rather snippy.“With all due respect, what’s it got to do with you?” Farage snapped when questioned about the gift on a LBC radio show this week.Nigel Farage leader of Reform UK drinks a cup of tea as he meets supporters after a press conference in London, Thursday, April 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)
The gift first came to light in April after the Guardian published a report and Farage subsequently acknowledged the funds, telling the Telegraph at the time that it was meant to pay for his personal security.“This money was given to me so that I would be safe and secure for the rest of my life,” Farage told the Telegraph. “I have tried and failed in the past to get security funded by the Home Office and I don’t think the state will ever help me. I’m very much on my own and will be for the rest of my life, and I have to face up to that grim reality. Christopher is an ardent supporter who is deeply concerned for my safety.”Farage has indeed been targeted for public attacks by political goons for years. Deranged protestors have struck him with milkshakes, cement, and placards, dating back to at least 2014 when he was campaigning for the Brexit movement.In May, Reform U.K. published a statement alleging that the public revelation of the £5 million gift was due to a coordinated Russian hack, an allegation the Guardian dismissed as a “baseless attack on the media.”The Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards opened its inquiry into the matter on May 11.Chair of the Labour Party Anna Turley referred Farage to the Financial Conduct Authority this week to investigate whether his positive comments about cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology have benefited Harbone.“Mr Farage’s public advocacy for stablecoins and cryptoassets raises issues within the FCA’s remit,” she wrote in a letter this week. “He has publicly praised the stablecoin Tether, attacked measures that could limit the growth of private stablecoins, and argued that the United Kingdom should become a global centre for cryptoasset activity. At the same time, he and his political party are both being funded directly by people with financial interests in cryptocurrencies.”It’s not the first time that Farage has faced reprimand for financial misconduct. The parliamentary commissioner for standards ruled in January that Farage breached MPs’ rules 17 times with failures to report interests amounting to £384,000 (about $507,000). The money had been accumulated through Farage’s activities on platforms such as X, Cameo, and Google. Additionally, he had failed to disclose payments from GB News.The commissioner ruled that Farage had “no malicious intent” and found the breaches to be “inadvertent,” and therefore not worth sanction.But this time around, the atmosphere is far more severe.As questions have been put to Farage about the generous gift from Harborne, his characterizations of its purpose have been confusing at best and contradictory at worst. Despite previously describing it as a fund for his personal security, he told the LBC in the tense interview this week that he believes it was a “reward for giving up a quarter of a century of my life, giving up a huge income in the City of London, putting up with lots of abuse.”“It was an unconditional gift. I can spend it on Ferraris if I want. That’d be entirely up to me,” Farage asserted on LBC, adding, “I can do what I want with it. I can put it on the horses.”From left, Reform UK’s Home Affairs spokesman Zia Yusuf, Treasury spokesman Robert Jenrick, party leader Nigel Farage, business, trade and energy spokesman Richard Tice and education, skills and equalities spokeswoman Suella Braverman during a press conference in London, Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026. (Stefan Rousseau/PA via AP)
















