LONDON— Nigel Farage is facing the most intense period of scrutiny since his party rose to the top of British opinion polls and unsettled the dominance of Conservatives on the right.

Two brewing rows over financial help to the Reform UK leader and Brexit veteran are putting him under fresh pressure — and could even lead to a special election to oust him. Here’s POLITICO’s guide.

A £5 million donation is already being probed

Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards Daniel Greenberg —the U.K. parliament’s standards watchdog — is already investigating whether Farage broke House of Commons rules by failing to declare a £5 million donation from crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne.

The money was received in early 2024, before he became an member of parliament, but new MPs are required register all their financial interests received in the 12 months before their election.

There is an exemption for gifts received in a purely personal capacity, and Farage has defended accepting the cash on these grounds. He has said the donation was a “personal, unconditional gift.”

That could lead to a by-election …

If Greenberg finds Farage has breached the rules, he has a range of sanctions at his disposal. These include ordering an apology, or the nuclear option of a temporary suspension from the House of Commons.

If Farage is barred from the Commons for more than 10 sitting days his constituents in the seaside town of Clacton will have six weeks to request a by-election under the Recall of MPs Act. Ten percent of voters in his constituency must proactively sign a petition to trigger the vote.

Farage could stand in that by-election, but it’s not a done deal. He won decisively in Clacton in 2024, but now faces a challenge from the hard-right Restore Britain party, whose leader Rupert Lowe is already threatening to mobilize in an effort to dethrone Farage.

And now there’s a second row brewing

Farage is facing fresh accusations he failed to declare gifts and donations from another crypto entrepreneur.

George Cottrell, who spent time in an Arizona prison after pleading guilty to wire fraud, funded the Reform UK leader’s private security, staff, transport, and accommodation in the year before he was elected to the Commons, the Sunday Times newspaper reported over the weekend.

Farage also reportedly stayed at 32-year-old Cottrell’s five-story home near Buckingham Palace.

The Reform UK leader said in a statement to the Daily Express newspaper Sunday night: “I have done no wrongdoing, followed the rules and I am now considering legal action against The Sunday Times.

“It’s now clear the establishment will stop at nothing to hurt Reform – we want to smash their cosy consensus.”

His political rivals are leaping on it

The allegations are easy ammunition for Farage’s opponents, eager for a chance to dent his ratings.

The Liberal Democrats have already written to Greenberg asking him to investigate the Cottrell support. A Labour spokesperson said: “The truth is, Farage and his party are just in it for themselves — they’re entirely unfit for office.” Meanwhile the Tories, who have most to gain from a Farage takedown, have also called for an investigation, with Conservative chairman Kevin Hollinrake saying the public “deserve transparency.”

Meanwhile Andy Burnham risks messing with Farage’s gameplan

This all comes as the ruling Labour Party enjoys a slight lift in the polls after Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced his resignation.

His expected replacement, Andy Burnham, is more popular and scored a decisive victory over Farage’s Reform UK in the Makerfield by-election last month. Burnham’s promise of a fresh direction could appeal to some traditional Labour voters who deserted the party under Starmer — and Reform has yet to settle on a strategy for a Burnham fightback.

But but but…

Farage is a great political survivor. His poll ratings have not taken a significant hit during previous controversies.

Reform UK is still 5 points ahead of Labour, according to POLITICO’s Poll of Polls and there is no serious alternative power-base within a party he founded. His allies have been flooding social media and the airwaves claiming the allegations are “baseless and contrived” by journalists.

And Reform UK is no longer just a protest party: it leapt forward at local elections earlier this year, giving it a structural toe-hold it has never previously achieved.



What to know about the cash questions chasing Nigel Farage
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