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UK Local Elections 2026
7APR

Harborne gave Reform UK £9m, a UK records high

2 min read
21:56UTC

The Electoral Commission's Q3 2025 report records Reform UK taking £10.5m between July and September, including a £9m donation from Christopher Harborne that is the largest single donation to a UK party from a living individual since records began.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Christopher Harborne's £9m Q3 donation to Reform UK is the largest single contribution on Electoral Commission record.

The Electoral Commission Q3 2025 donation report, published in late 2025, records Reform UK accepting just over £10.5 million between July and September. Of that total, £9 million came from a single donation by Christopher Harborne, a British cryptocurrency investor and aviation entrepreneur resident in Thailand. The Electoral Commission notes it is the largest single donation to a UK political party from a living individual since the regulator's records began.

Reform UK's Q3 total was also the largest quarterly sum accepted by any UK party in 2025. The Conservative Party took just under £7 million in the same quarter across hundreds of smaller donations. Labour's Q3 figure was below £3 million. One donor's contribution to one party exceeded the total Q3 intake of any other UK party from all sources combined.

Party finance law under the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000 (PPERA) treats permissible donations from UK-registered voters as lawful regardless of scale, and Harborne is on the electoral roll. The Electoral Commission's enforcement power extends to permissibility, not to structural concentration. No party has formally challenged the declaration. The statutory framework as drafted has no mechanism to respond to single-donor dominance on this scale, whether or not the donor remains on the roll.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Electoral Commission publishes a public register of large donations to political parties every three months. The register for July-September 2025 shows Reform UK receiving £10.5 million in that single quarter. £9 million of that came from one person: Christopher Harborne, a British businessman who made his fortune in cryptocurrency and lives in Thailand. The Electoral Commission says this is the largest single donation to a UK political party from a living person since records began. The donation is legal. Under UK law, any British citizen on the electoral register can donate any amount to a political party. There is no cap on individual donations. Harborne is on the electoral register.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If Harborne reduces or withdraws future donations, Reform UK's campaign capacity for the 2028 or 2029 cycles would fall sharply, exposing the party's structural dependence on a single income source.

  • Meaning

    The UK's unlimited individual donation framework under PPERA 2000 produces outcomes — one donor supplying more than one party's entire quarterly income — that the Act's drafters did not anticipate and the Electoral Commission has no power to limit.

First Reported In

Update #1 · Wales rewrites parliament no voter has used

Electoral Commission· 7 Apr 2026
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Different Perspectives
Welsh Government (Plaid Cymru under Rhun ap Iorwerth)
Welsh Government (Plaid Cymru under Rhun ap Iorwerth)
Plaid's Cardiff minority government relies on Green confidence-and-supply with no written agreement, the same arrangement that collapsed in Scotland in 2023. Green Westminster polling fell from 17% to 15% in two weeks as Greens took governing responsibility; whether that deflation reaches Cardiff is the near-term test for ap Iorwerth's majority.
Reform-run English county councils (Essex, Suffolk, Norfolk)
Reform-run English county councils (Essex, Suffolk, Norfolk)
Essex named a City-trained efficiency lead over a budget where statute has already committed roughly 98% of spend; Suffolk simultaneously issued a pre-action letter against the reorganisation that will dissolve it. Reform-controlled authorities are spending public money on litigation their own sector lawyers expect to fail while their DOGE units face statutory constraints they cannot override.
Scottish Government (SNP under John Swinney)
Scottish Government (SNP under John Swinney)
Swinney rested the 72-55 Holyrood mandate on the combined SNP-Green bloc rather than his own party's 58 seats, seven short of the trigger he named; he has publicly conceded he has no plan if Westminster holds its veto. The constitutional argument is made; the enforcement route does not exist.
UK Government (MHCLG and Downing Street)
UK Government (MHCLG and Downing Street)
MHCLG has until 12 June to respond to Suffolk's pre-action letter and faces three further counties at the same stage; Downing Street rejected Holyrood's Section 30 demand as a spokesperson lobby line rather than a written statement, declining to open formal inter-governmental correspondence. Both decisions compress Reform's two main legal challenges into the same two-week window.
UK Government (Labour)
UK Government (Labour)
Westminster framed the youth justice transfer as a culmination of prior work rather than a precedent, refused a Section 30 order before the request arrived, and omitted both the Representation of the People Bill and any Wales Bill from the 13 May King's Speech. Starmer is described as open to a devolved-leaders summit in June.
Reform UK
Reform UK
Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk filed pre-action protocol letters framing their LGR challenge as mandate-consistent, while 22 Reform councillors departed in 14 days at an annualised rate nearly three times the 10 percent projection. Richard Tice defended the Harborne 5 million pound gift as unconditional, with no acknowledgement of Farage's two contradictory accounts on record.