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UK Local Elections 2026
14MAY

Three crypto gaps persist through polling day

2 min read
20:05UTC

Lowdown

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Three enforcement routes round the incoming crypto donations ban and none close before 7 May.

Spotlight on Corruption, a UK anti-corruption research NGO, published a 1 April 2026 report identifying three remaining enforcement gaps in the UK's incoming cryptocurrency donations ban: crypto-to-fiat conversion, direct personal donations to MPs, and political memecoins. 1 The gaps persist through the 7 May elections regardless of when the Representation of the People Bill, currently in Public Bill Committee, receives Royal Assent .

Spotlight's analysis names the engineering around the Reform wallet-verification problem and the Harborne donor record . Converting crypto to sterling before handing it over clears the party-level ban by making the donation fiat. Personal donations to individual MPs fall outside the ban's scope. Memecoins are not yet named in UK law. Each of the three is a route the bill, as drafted, does not close before polling.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The UK is in the process of passing a new law, the Representation of the People Bill, that will ban political parties from accepting donations in cryptocurrency. Reform UK is the main party affected because it received large amounts through a cryptocurrency payments system. But a research organisation called Spotlight on Corruption has identified three ways the ban won't work completely: first, if crypto is converted to regular money before it is donated; second, if money is given directly to individual MPs rather than to a party; and third, political tokens (a kind of cryptocurrency tied to a political brand). These three gaps will still exist when people vote on 7 May, even if the new law passes before then, because the law was not written to cover them.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    The three identified gaps mean Reform UK can receive equivalent financial support through alternative crypto-adjacent channels even if the Representation of the People Bill receives Royal Assent before any future election cycle.

  • Precedent

    Spotlight on Corruption's gap analysis, if cited during the Public Bill Committee hearings (due 23 April), could produce last-minute amendments addressing at least the fiat-conversion gap before Report Stage.

First Reported In

Update #4 · 22 Days to Go: Greens Take a Reform Seat in Kent

Spotlight on Corruption· 15 Apr 2026
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