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UK Local Elections 2026
26APR

Crypto Ban Lands on Reform Ahead of Polling Day

3 min read
13:33UTC

Parliament has rewritten party finance law mid-campaign, applying a cryptocurrency donation ban backwards to money already banked. The only party confirmed to have accepted crypto is Reform UK, which now faces a 30-day compliance window that expires near election day.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Reform UK faces a crypto compliance deadline near polling day while managing candidate attrition and IFS rejection.

Parliament amended the Representation of the People Bill on 25 March 2026, introducing a retrospective moratorium on Cryptocurrency donations to political parties, a £100,000 annual cap on donations from overseas electors, and shell company restrictions that cap foreign-parent companies at £500 for parties and £50 for candidates. The retrospective element is the constitutional novelty: the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000 has not previously applied prohibitions backwards to donations already received.

Reform UK is the only major party confirmed to have received crypto donations . The party acknowledged "a couple" of such contributions to the Electoral Commission but disclosed no amounts. The quantum matters enormously. Christopher Harborne's £12 million in conventional donations across Q3 and Q4 2025 is entirely unaffected; the crypto question is separate. But if the undisclosed receipts are material, the 30-day return window after Royal Assent becomes a compliance crisis arriving simultaneously with the campaign's final push. No date for Royal Assent has been confirmed, meaning the window's precise end-point is itself unknown.

Former Permanent Secretary Philip Rycroft was commissioned in December 2025 to review foreign financial influence in UK politics. His recommendations became law in three months, with retrospective application, during a regulated campaign period. Commission to legislation took three months; the Electoral Commission typically takes months to consult on draft statutory guidance before any significant change to PPERA. The speed here reflects the political urgency the Harborne donation scale created, as the five-poll average that put Reform UK on 25 per cent nationally made its funding arrangements a target.

For every other party, the overseas elector cap and shell company restrictions create new compliance obligations regardless of political colour. But the asymmetry is plain. Reform UK enters the final four weeks of a three-nation campaign simultaneously managing a legal deadline, a candidate attrition problem in Wales, and IFS manifesto demolitions in Scotland.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Political parties in the UK are allowed to accept donations from people and companies, but there are rules about where that money can come from. One of those rules, just passed by Parliament, bans donations made in cryptocurrency, a type of digital money like Bitcoin. The unusual part is that the ban applies backwards in time, meaning money that was already donated in crypto before the law passed is now treated as if it should not have been accepted. The party told to return that money is Reform UK, which is the only major party known to have taken crypto donations. They have 30 days from when the law gets royal approval to give the money back, and that deadline may fall very close to election day. The law also sets a new limit on how much money people living overseas can donate to a UK party each year, and restricts companies that are owned by foreign parents from giving more than a small amount. These rules are designed to stop foreign money from having too much influence on UK elections.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The fundamental structural cause is the failure of the original PPERA 2000 framework to anticipate decentralised digital assets as a donation mechanism. Cryptocurrency enables pseudonymous value transfer in a way that analogue donation routes do not; the donation was received before any legal framework existed to govern it, creating a compliance retrospectivity problem the law was simply not designed to handle.

A secondary structural cause is the Barnett-formula-like asymmetry in the UK's devolved donation regulation: the Electoral Commission regulates UK-wide party finance but has no power to block individual donations in real time, only to investigate after the fact. By the time an investigation could conclude, the campaign would already have been decided. Parliament chose to act by legislation rather than wait for the Commission's post-election process.

The overseas elector cap and shell company restrictions have a different root cause: the sharp increase in the overseas-registered voter franchise following the 2022 Elections Act, which removed the 15-year overseas voting limit. The Rycroft Review found that the combination of an unlimited franchise for overseas electors and no donation cap created a structural pathway for large-scale foreign financial influence that no post-devolution parliament had previously had to address.

First Reported In

Update #2 · New Money Rules, Old Party Fractures

HM Government· 10 Apr 2026
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