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UK Local Elections 2026
14MAY

Reform took 2.7x Labour's Q4 donations as campaign began

2 min read
20:05UTC

The Electoral Commission's Q4 2025 report shows Reform UK on £5.4m, the Conservatives on £4m and Labour on £1.98m, with a further £3m from Harborne in the period taking his six-month total to roughly £12m.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Reform UK out-raised Labour by 2.7 times in Q4 2025, funded mostly by a further £3m from Christopher Harborne.

The Electoral Commission published its Q4 2025 donation figures in February 2026, showing Reform UK on £5.4 million against the Conservative Party on £4 million and Labour on £1.98 million. A further £3 million donation from Christopher Harborne appears in the Q4 report, bringing his personal six-month total to approximately £12 million.

Reform's Q4 total is 2.7 times the Labour figure in the quarter immediately before the pre-election regulated period began. The regulated period limits the amount parties and their supporters can spend on national campaigning in the run-up to polling day. Money raised before the regulated period starts can be spent during it; money raised inside it counts against the cap. Reform entered 2026 having banked more spendable cash than Labour and the Conservatives combined during the final unregulated quarter.

The structural conclusion the Electoral Commission data force is that one donor has provided roughly twice what Labour received from all sources combined in the final quarter of 2025. By donation volume, Reform UK is not a grassroots insurgency; it is a single-donor operation whose electoral viability is tied, in the 2026 cycle, to the continuing willingness of one individual to write multi-million-pound cheques.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Parties can spend a limited amount on campaigning during the official election campaign period. That limit is called the regulated period cap. But money raised before that period starts can be stockpiled and spent during the campaign without counting against the cap in the same way. In October-December 2025, the quarter before the regulated period for the May 2026 elections began, Reform UK raised £5.4 million — most of it from a £3 million donation by the same person who gave £9 million the quarter before. Labour raised £1.98 million from all sources combined. The Conservatives raised £4 million. That pre-campaign fundraising advantage means Reform UK entered the regulated election period with substantially more spendable cash than any other party.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Reform UK entered the regulated campaign period with a pre-banked spending advantage that Labour and the Conservatives cannot offset through in-period fundraising alone.

  • Risk

    If Harborne's donations constitute an indirect foreign funding mechanism — a question the Electoral Commission has not publicly assessed — the permissibility of the entire Q3-Q4 sum is legally uncertain.

First Reported In

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Electoral Commission· 7 Apr 2026
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