UK Watchdog Can’t Track Reform UK Crypto Donations

UK Watchdog Can’t Track Reform UK Crypto Donations 

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UK Watchdog Can’t Track Reform UK Crypto Donations Amid Foreign Fears
  • Reform UK did not provide crypto wallet addresses to regulators, limiting transparency.
  • Electoral Commission says it cannot verify whether donations come from foreign sources.
  • Crypto payments processed via overseas firms complicate oversight and enforcement under UK law.

Britain’s electoral regulator has no idea where Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party is receiving its cryptocurrency donations. According to reports, the party has not shared a single wallet address with the Electoral Commission, and the watchdog says that without them, independent verification is simply impossible.

The Core Problem in Three Points

  • Reform UK declined to share its crypto wallet addresses with the Electoral Commission despite direct requests.
  • Without those addresses, regulators cannot independently trace whether donations originated from overseas sources, which would be illegal under British electoral law.
  • The payment processor, Radom Pay, operates through a Polish entity outside the Financial Conduct Authority’s jurisdiction, blocking UK regulators from demanding donor records.

A crypto wallet address is a public identifier on the blockchain. With access to those addresses, regulators can trace the movement of funds. Without them, they are working blind.

The Foreign Money Question

Reform UK’s largest donor is Thailand-based Christopher Harborne, who has given the party over £12 million, including a £9 million single donation, the largest individual political donation in British history. 

Harborne is a major investor in Tether, the stablecoin, which made a strategic investment in Rumble, a video platform linked to a Kremlin-backed influence operation identified by the US Department of Justice.

There is also a structural loophole that regulators cannot currently close. Donations under £500 require no reporting. A donor could create multiple crypto wallets and make repeated sub-threshold transfers without triggering any disclosure requirement.

The Commission’s Own Admission

The Electoral Commission acknowledged it lacks the expertise and legal authority to adequately monitor cryptocurrency flows into political parties. It is currently seeking specialist external advice and has called on the government for new powers, including requiring FCA-regulated payment providers to convert crypto to sterling at the point of receipt, and compelling overseas processors to share donor information.

None of those requirements currently exists under UK law.

What Comes Next

The government’s Representation of the People Bill is passing through Parliament. An independent review into foreign interference is due by the end of March, after which ministers say crypto-specific amendments will follow. Three parties now accept crypto donations in Britain.

Related: Crypto Investor Harborne Donates £3M to Reform UK, Sparking Crypto Rule Debate

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