The Rest Is Politics - Who Funds Reform? The Missing Millions

Episode Date: May 28, 2026

Who is the secretive billionaire bankrolling Reform — and what does he want? How did a brand new party raise and spend £17 million with no public explanation? As Farage inches toward power, who's r...eally pulling the strings? This four part series, made in collaboration with The Observer’s Slow Newscast will explore the money, donors and power networks behind Reform UK.  To hear all four episodes as they drop, sign up at therestispolitics.com Go deeper into the world of The Rest Is Politics by signing up for our free newsletter ⁠HERE⁠, featuring exclusive interviews, analysis and weekend reads from Alastair and Rory. The Rest Is Politics is powered by Fuse Energy. Stop overpaying for energy. Switch at ⁠fuseenergy.com/politics⁠ and get a free TRIP+ subscription. Get our exclusive NordVPN deal here ➼ ⁠nordvpn.com/restispolitics⁠ It's risk-free with Nord's 30 day money back guarantee ✅ Reporter: Cat Neilan Series Reporter/Producer: Poppy Bullard Producer: Matt Russell Sound Design: Dominic Delargy Producer for Goalhanger: India Dunkley Executive Producer for Goalhanger: Tom Whiter Executive Producer for the Observer: Jasper Corbett Clips: Reform UK, BBC, The Times, House of Commons Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Thanks for listening to The Restis Politics. To support the podcast, listen without the adverts and get early access to episodes and live show tickets, go to therestestepolitics.com. That's the rest is politics.com. Hello and welcome to The Restis Politics with me, Rory Stewart. And with me, Alastair Campbell. And we have very exciting news about a four-part mini-series that we are doing on the funding of Reform UK. And we're doing it with The Observer. and it's been an amazing piece of work.
Starting point is 00:00:40 The series is put together by Kat Neelan, who's the Observer's Whitehall editor. In episode one, we begin the story of Who Funds Reform UK. So it's something that Alastair and I have been fascinated by for a very long time. And of course, we get glimpses of it. Many people will have heard
Starting point is 00:00:55 that Nigel Farage received a £5 million contribution towards his inverted commerce security from Chris Harbourn, who is a crypto billionaire based in Thailand. But as this investigation, shows, the story of reforms funding is much, much more complicated. And they've got some unique interviews here. They've interviewed Ben Habib, who was very close to Nigel Farage, and is now
Starting point is 00:01:18 beginning to talk much more openly about where some of this funding is coming from. We're talking about Tory donors crossing the aisles. We're talking about the kinds of motivations that drive them in. And above all, we're talking about how opaque it is and how mysterious it is and what on earth you have to do to save your democracy from a few very wealthy people. putting in sums of money, which are colossal. I mean, so much larger than anything that you and I would have seen in politics. One of the reasons why we were interested in doing this is because we've seen what has happened in other countries where money is just allowed to flood in to the parties, to individuals. We're seeing it now with Trump in America. We saw it recently
Starting point is 00:01:58 with Orban, who when he lost, his kind of wealth was exposed. We've seen it with Russia, with Putin, who has gone from being... You know, the guy who took over saying he was going to lead Russia in a more modern Western direction who's becoming allegedly one of the richest people on the planet. So I think this is going to be an important series. I think it's timely because reform are on the march. And a lot of people who support them, I suspect do see them as on their side, men of the people, women of the people, who in fact are becoming hugely wealthy through politics.
Starting point is 00:02:33 It's an audio-only series, so something to listen to rather than to watch. watch and we'll also be putting out links and more details in the trip newsletter, which you can please sign up to by going in the episode to the description box and clicking on the link. So here is episode one of Who Funds Reform, The Missing Millions. This episode is brought you by Fuse Energy. Fuse has introduced the tracker tariff designed to give customers what matters most from their energy supplier, savings clarity and a bit more control. And it guarantees that your rates stay below the off-gem price gap, which saves you up to £200. And the tariff updates automatically every quarter. Energy prices don't move in straight lines. Global events and market pressures
Starting point is 00:03:17 you can't predict and certainly can't control, still find their way onto your bill. And if you're on the wrong tariff, you can be stuck with higher rates after the pressure has ended. With Fuse Energy's tracker tariff, that changes. If prices fall, your rate adjusts at the next quarterly update. And it's automatic. No switching, no trying to second against the market. You're protected while prices are high and ready to benefit when they fall. Switch to fuse energies tracker tariff at fuseenergy.com slash politics and use code politics to get a free trip plus subscription. Visit fuseenergy.com for full terms and conditions. Now, for me, Brexit being completed, albeit not perfectly, but being completed,
Starting point is 00:04:05 marks the end of nearly 30 years of standing in elections and leading political passes. March 2021. A year into the COVID pandemic, and Nigel Farage makes a big decision. It's now time for somebody else to take the lead. The man who spent nearly 30 years campaigning for and helping to achieve Brexit has decided that he has had enough. Nigel Farage hands over the reins of his political. Party to Richard Tice, an ally and fellow Brexiteer. Reform UK is ambitious. Our country can indeed have a great future. But to achieve this goal,
Starting point is 00:04:47 we are absolutely clear that the country needs real reform. Richard Tice is going to inject new energy and lead the newly named Reform Party, while Farage rides off into the sunset. This isn't the first time Farage has stepped away from frontline politics, but he'll be back, perhaps sooner than anyone anticipates, because just as Richard Tice steps forward as the new leader of reform, the conservative establishment begins to crumble. Let me say immediately that I've paid the fine
Starting point is 00:05:25 and I once again offer a full apology. I'm here to say to you, hand on heart, that I did not lie to the House when those statements were made. Clearly now the will of the parliamentary Conservative Party that there should be a new leader of that party and therefore a new Prime Minister. I have therefore spoken to His Majesty the King to notify him that I am resigning as leader of the Conservative Party. As the Conservatives disintegrate in a series of unforced errors,
Starting point is 00:06:03 reform becomes a magnet for figures across the I'm delighted to announce that I have found that champion of the Red Wall for Reform UK. He's also, coincidentally, going to be Reform UK's first member of Parliament in the House of Commons. He is, of course, a person of great integrity, no nonsense, and is the member of Parliament in the County of Nottinghamshire for Ashfield. Please welcome Mr Lee Anderson. The party starts to attract not just conservative MPs, but former donors too. And then, on the 22nd of May, 2024, Now is the moment for Britain to choose its future.
Starting point is 00:06:52 To decide whether we want to build on the progress we have made or risk going back to square one with no plan and no such. Standing behind a lectern in Downing Street, a rain-soaked Rishi Sunak announces a snap general election. The combination of an unpopular conservative party and a disaffected British public presents Nigel Farage with an opportunity too good to miss. I'm coming back as leader of Reform UK, but not just for this election campaign. I'm coming back for the next five years. And a 30-year dream finally comes true for the man who said he was done with standing in elections. I therefore do hereby declare that Nigel Paul Farage is duly elected as the Member of Parliament
Starting point is 00:07:42 for the Clacton constituency. Reform wins five seats. Labour wins a big majority. And the Conservatives suffer their worst electoral defeat in parliamentary history. But those five seats are just the start. Over the course of the next year, there's a steady stream of conservative defections. And as the shine wears off the Labour government, reform inches ahead in the polls. For the first time in his career, people are starting to talk about Nigel Farage as a possible future Prime Minister.
Starting point is 00:08:19 Reform's rise isn't just a tale of how Nigel Farage has disrupted a century of norms. It's also the story of how reform has done this and who helped them get there. And it's a story about a system which allows people to buy. their way into British politics. I've been a political journalist for 12 years. I've covered Nigel Farage in all his guises, from UK, to the Brexit Party and now to Reform UK. Farage is a very particular politician and one who looks set to shake up the usual run of things. In the past year, I've been looking at his and reforms relationship to money and where they get it from. I want to know what it tells us about the man who could become the next prime minister,
Starting point is 00:09:07 the type of government he might run, and the type of people he'll bring with him along the way. I'm Kat Neelan. From the rest is politics and the observer's slow newscast, this is Who Funds Reform? Episode 1, The Missing Millions. Reform doesn't operate like other political parties. It has a start-up mentality and shuns the establishment.
Starting point is 00:09:36 That means the party's attitude to money is different too. So when journalists try to make sense of how they're funded, sometimes we're left with more questions than answers. Looking back at their first year of operating, there's one big question which stands out. But to understand why reform works the way it does, you have to go back to 2014. The word Brexit is still barely in use.
Starting point is 00:10:04 But already, the problem Brexit is still barely in use. But already, the battle to secure a referendum on the issue is hotting up. Nigel Farage is leader of UKIP, and a brash, multi-millionaire insurance magnate from Bristol makes a big entrance to the UK political scene. This businessman Aaron Banks, whom nobody had heard of, was giving £100,000 to UKIP. This is Michael Crick, the political journalist and author of one party after another, which chronicles Nigel Farage's life and early political career. Until this point, Aaron Banks has been a conservative supporter and donor.
Starting point is 00:10:40 His defection to UKIP is memorable. When William Haig, then conservative leader of the House, is asked about Aaron Banks, he dismisses him as a nobody, which doesn't go down well. Journalists were summoned from the Conservative Conference, which was still going on, I think, in Birmingham, to this manor house just outside Bristol, where I'm at one of Aaron Banks' homes. I was among them. And we turned up and we assumed they were going to announce a new defector. But no, there we were.
Starting point is 00:11:12 We were greeted by Aaron Banks. And Aaron Banks announces that he is now donating £1 million to UKIP. Perhaps the most expensive thing that William Hay ever said. Aaron Banks quickly becomes not just a donor to UKIP, but a close confidant of Nigel Farage. Banks was the only political person you could say who ended up being a close friend of Nigel Farage. He's a very engaging character.
Starting point is 00:11:46 You know, he's always got a grin on his face. He's always got something to say. He's a sort of barraboy personality. His financial support for Brexit goes beyond the party too. He becomes an active campaigner in the Brexit referendum, running and funding the unofficial leave campaign. Leave.EU. Working together with Nigel Farage,
Starting point is 00:12:08 the campaign becomes a haze of stunts, billboards and slogans. Although they're not part of the formal Brexit creeping, they can fairly claim credit for having helped to secure the result. The British people have spoken and the answer is, we're out. But in around 2018, Aaron Banks starts to become a reputational hazard for Nigel Farage. The problem was that there were lots of allegations about, Where did Aaron Banks get his money from? And how rich was he really?
Starting point is 00:12:38 Well, it was pointed out that Aaron Banks had had several meetings with Russian diplomats in London. He said it was a couple of boozy lunches. The Electoral Commission and the National Crime Agency launched separate investigations into Aaron Banks' finances. Banks vehemently denied that he was funded by Russian money. Eventually, in 2019, both investigations conclude. there is no evidence of any foreign interference in the loans that Aaron Banks gave to Leave.EU. But that is sometime into the future. By late 2018, Nigel Farage is approaching a crossroads.
Starting point is 00:13:18 British politics is in a volatile place. Theresa May is running a minority government and struggling to clarify what the referendum result really means. Prime Minister. Yes, can I say to my Honourable Friend, there has been much sort of jocularity around the term Brexit means Brexit, but it does mean Brexit. People want to ensure. After two and a half years of negotiating, the Cabinet agrees a deal
Starting point is 00:13:41 which immediately angers both Remainers and hardline Brexiteers. There are resignations from May's Cabinet and people plotting to ouster from number 10. Nigel Farage is watching Brexit unravel and his main backer, Aaron Banks, is causing unwanted attention. After that, I think that Farage
Starting point is 00:14:01 deliberately distanced himself from banks for quite a while. So if he wants to keep campaigning for Brexit, he's going to need a new party and some new financial backers. It's late December 2018 and Catherine Blakelock is at home. She's recently left UKIP, the party that had been her political home for years, concerned about Tommy Robinson's involvement. Anti-immigration is still my big thing.
Starting point is 00:14:32 I think it would destroy the country and I think it is destroying the country. She sits down to register a number of entities, small companies or organisations that could germinate into a political party. But it's not a party she thinks she can lead. I know my position in the world, if you like. I'm a sort of, you know, tier three person, an unknown, not very well known. She's acting, if not on instruction, then at least in agreement with Veterans of the Leave campaign. So I bought the Brexit Party as a name. and Nigel liked that.
Starting point is 00:15:09 So very quietly, the Brexit Party is born. Well, it was always the idea that Nigel would be a leader. That was agreed. Like many people we spoke to for this story, having given time and energy supporting Nigel Farage's political goals, she's since fallen out with him and with the party as a whole. Remember, the Brexit party simply rebrands when it becomes reform. So the rise of the former and how it got it.
Starting point is 00:15:35 its money is inextricably linked to the latter. By 2019, Nigel Farage has been out of frontline politics for nearly three years, having quit as leader of UKIP after the 2016 referendum. But, ever the political opportunist, he suddenly announces he's back. We're going to use these elections to change things. I said many years ago that I wanted to cause an earthquake in British politics. Well, now, what I'm fighting for, and with your support, What we will attempt to achieve is a democratic revolution in British politics.
Starting point is 00:16:11 At the public launch of the Brexit Party in April, Nigel Farage unveils a raft of candidates to stand in the following months European elections. These were the elections the party said shouldn't be happening. But, because of the status in the House of Commons, Nigel Farage says he's left with no choice but to return. I did say that if I ever had to come back into the political fray, next time it'd be no more Mr Nice Guy. And I mean it, I mean it. This new Brexit party is a departure from Nigel Farage's old machine. Gone is UKIP's signature purple and gold,
Starting point is 00:16:49 replaced with an icy cool blue. But this party is not just cosmetically different. It's set up as a business, a business with a mystery at the heart of it. That is just an absolutely huge figure. And for a new party, albeit with a history, it is a huge figure. This is Dr Sam Power, one of the UK's leading experts in political finance. By the end of its first year, the Brexit Party has raised millions.
Starting point is 00:17:20 In fact, a lot more than you would expect for a party of its size or age. But if you wanted to know who has given them all that money, you'd struggle to find out. There's very little public information. There is just so much that we don't know. There are numbers here which just operate like a black hole, the donation income, the other expenditure. This mystery is a useful place to start because it's also the starting point for reform
Starting point is 00:17:50 and some of the key people involved then are playing important roles now. Word is getting out that Nigel Farage has a new project. I was manning off in our boardroom about the my frustrations in February, I think, 2019. This is Ben Habib. He's a businessman who, until this point, has been a supporter of and donor to the Conservative Party. And there was our PR guy was there who knew, I was Farage and he said,
Starting point is 00:18:19 do you want to meet Farage? He's setting up this new party called the Brexit Party. And in those days, I thought Farage was a sort of racist, xenophobic, swivel-eyed lunatic because that was the portrayal of him, you know, through mainstream media. But I went to meet him and found him to be a perfectly reasonable, affable, charming guy. So he signs up. I offered to donate and I offered to help in any way I can. If you're setting up a party, Ben Habib is exactly the kind of person you might want to have around. He's a wealthy businessman with experience of working in politics already. But the Brexit
Starting point is 00:18:54 party isn't after his money, which is weird because establishing a brand new party isn't cheap. So I became an NEP. I think I donated a small amount of money to the Brexit party a few thousand quid, but, you know, nothing substantial. Did you get the impression that they were like, they weren't short of money at that point? They weren't. That's my producer, Poppy Bullard, speaking to Ben Habib.
Starting point is 00:19:18 So why wouldn't a small party be on the hunt for as many donors as it could find? This is where the party's money gets interesting. How many party things like this do you think you've looked at? Far too many than I would care to admit on record. That's between me and my God, how many of these that I have looked at. So you pretty much are you like a connoisseur of a party financial statement? It's certainly not something that I would find myself boasting about in the pub, but if you will, I am a connoisseur of party accounts.
Starting point is 00:19:57 Yeah. That's Poppy Bullard again. She's speaking to Sam Power at the Observer offices. They're looking at the Brexit Party's financial statement from the end of 2019. essentially its first year of operating. And it's a peculiar document. When I was looking through this, and I know that when you look through it too,
Starting point is 00:20:16 something really jumped out to both of us, and that is the amount of donations that the Brexit Party got in the first year of its running. And I'm just going to get the page up here so we can have a look at this. When I saw that, it struck me as being just the most enormous number, not a number that I'd necessarily seen reported
Starting point is 00:20:36 out and about and a number that doesn't seem to match up particularly with necessarily all the things that we know publicly about the party. So what did you think when you saw this, you know, this statement? That is just an absolutely huge figure. The number they're looking at is a single number in the donations column. It's £17.2 million. There isn't really much more detail than that. No information about who the money came from or what it was spent on. In terms of donations, we know that around £11 million was declared. to the Electoral Commission. And according to Nigel Farage,
Starting point is 00:21:10 five million pounds came from small donations. But that doesn't account for it all. And the number in the expenditure column is even bigger, nearly £19 million. Even accounting for the fact there were both European elections and a general election that year, Sam Power says the numbers just don't stack up.
Starting point is 00:21:29 What that expenditure is, is bizarre more than anything else, in that there is no good reason why the Brexit party need to raise £17 million. There is no really good reason that I can see that they would need to spend nearly £19 million. We can see from the document that they spent £1.2 million on staffing costs and £9.3 million on campaigning. But there's another mystery figure in the spending column too. There is just so much that we don't know.
Starting point is 00:22:04 There are numbers here which just operate like a black hole. The other expenditure. Yeah, other expenditure up at like 7 million. 7 million, which is what we might expect that in a conservative return of a conservative account
Starting point is 00:22:20 when they are accounting for 30, 40, 50 million pounds, for example. That's 7 million pounds spent on well, we have no idea. And short of someone telling us, no way of finding out. new party, albeit with a history, it is a huge figure. So a generous reading of it is that it is a
Starting point is 00:22:42 startup cost. An ungenerous reading is that it is just an awful lot of money, which we don't really know the provenance of. We can look through the electoral commission database to see, but we don't really know why they have and why they need that much money. And then if you move on to the accounts immediately following this, they go back to looking like a niche party again. They go back to looking like a party that raises, they raise one or two million pounds, if that. I think in one year even, it's not even in the millions. And the most important thing to note about the Brexit Party's accounting in 2019 is that it's completely legal. The party isn't required, outside of an election period, to log what it's
Starting point is 00:23:27 spent all that cash on, nor is it obliged to say where it came from. No one we spoke to during the reporting of this story, wanted to, or could, tell us what the money was spent on. Nor did reform respond to our request for clarification. But there are a few things we know about that enormous sum. We know that around £10 million of it came from the man who will go on to define the prospects and trajectory of reform, Christopher Harbourn. He was propelled into the headlines last year when he made the biggest single-border political donation in British history to reform $9 million. He's since topped that up with a further £3 million.
Starting point is 00:24:11 But the truth is, he's been part of the project from the early Brexit Party days. I met Christopher Harbourn in their office during those initial meetings, and he had been a Conservative donor himself. This is Ben Habib again. You know, we had a kind of shared history with the Conservative Party, and we both discussed how we loathe the way the Conservative Party. he had ceased to be conservative. But I had no idea how rich Christopher Barthorne was when I first met him. I knew he was richer than me, but I didn't realize how considerably, how considerably, you know, how much more considerably rich he was than I am. Ben Habib is making an important
Starting point is 00:24:51 point. To us mere mortals, the thought of giving away tens or hundreds of thousands of pounds seems enormous. For the donor class, which includes people like Ben Habib, these figures are small change. But even amongst the donor class, there are scales of wealth. And Christopher Harbourn, he's in a league of his own. Ben Habib claims that Harbourn was responsible for donating far more during 2019 than has been made public. I think the reported figure is £10 million donated to the Brexit party by him during that six, nine month period that the Brexit party sort of functioned. But I think the figure's bigger than that. I think it's more like 14. And I know Tyson, Farage were flying up and down the country in helicopters and things, you know, for the campaign
Starting point is 00:25:37 during the general election, even though we stood down against the Conservatives, even though Farage had stood us down against the Conservatives. What's interesting about Harbourn is, at this point, he doesn't seem to have just been donating money. The enigmatic billionaire was plugged into the party machine. One source told the observer that when they visited the Brexit Party offices during the run-up to the European elections in 2019, it seemed like Christopher Harrow. Harbourn was there full-time. He had a desk, the source said, where he was working on the algorithms. Christopher Harbourn is a difficult person to get close to. He doesn't do interviews or
Starting point is 00:26:16 make statements. So to get an idea of what he wants and whether he's loyal to a cause or a particular party, you have to read between the lines, or at least down the columns of the Electoral Commission declarations. After this enthusiastic involvement with the Brexit Party. He doesn't appear in the Reform Party accounts again until 2025. And what was he doing in the interim period? But one thing Harbourn used to say to me in 2019 is that Boris is biddable, Boris Johnson is biddable. Ben Habib was suspicious of Harbourn's generosity at the time. After the 2019 general election, Christopher Harbourn stopped donating to the Brexit party and gave more than £1.5 million
Starting point is 00:27:02 to the Conservatives. In the months after Boris Johnson stepped down as Prime Minister, Christopher Harbourn donated a million pounds to him, the man who by then had become a backbench MP. According to The Guardian, the pair dined together twice in Singapore that same month. Christopher Harbourn later joined Boris Johnson on a trip to Ukraine. Christopher Harbourn's lawyers told the paper he had
Starting point is 00:27:28 no expectation of personal gain when he donated the money. But his proximity to power, even if it is party agnostic, is worth considering as we look to the future. Harbourn wants to see Brexit done? Support the Brexit party. Want to shape the Brexit deal? Support the Conservatives as they thrash it out. Which begs the question. In the year 26, a decade on from Brexit, what is the vision of Britain that Harbourn thinks reform can deliver?
Starting point is 00:28:01 And what are his other passion projects? Next time on Who Funds Reform? Yeah, look, he's very successful. You know, whatever he's done, he's created a huge success. Tice is one of the few people at the very top of these various parties that Farage has led at one point or another who Farage hasn't fallen out with. Everybody seems to be just drinking from the same teapot.
Starting point is 00:28:29 You know, they know you, you know them, you know what business they're in, they know what you're in. From hedge fund managers to metal magnates, we meet the men bankrolling reform. I thought that was a great episode, and I hope other people enjoyed it as much as we did. And I'm really pleased that we're beginning to do this. I mean, those were some really tough interviews, and we're beginning to get, with our partner's proper investigative journalism. And I'm so pleased that someone's spending the time, really getting to the bottom of some of these questions,
Starting point is 00:29:01 because, you know, you can talk about the rise of the far right as though it's a sort of organic thing, that would just happen by itself. But actually, funding, social media, which is something we've talked about a great deal, networks and connections between these different groups, these are the engines that allow these parties to go from quite small reckoning in the polls to suddenly exploding.
Starting point is 00:29:21 Well, I hope you enjoyed that. That is episode one of our series done in conjunction with the observer on the funding of reform, something about which I've been obsessed for a long time, and I hope that episode has made you think that there are reasons to be obsessed about this. well. If you want to hear the rest of this series, every other episode, as they drop, just go to the restispolitics.com. You can sign up.

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