
This week, investigator Lee Nallalingham has been calling out the Greens, upset by the party’s claim that they aren’t backed by wealthy donors.
For those that may not know, Nallalingham is a Reform UK branch chair for Newham and Tower Hamlets. In his critique has failed to recognise that the Greens are playing a very different game to their establishment rivals.
EXPOSED: The Green Party say they’re not backed by the wealthy or big business.
Here are some of their donors:
Mark Constantine
Co-founder of Lush (900+ stores globally)
Est. net worth: £250m–£350m
Antony Gormley
Internationally renowned sculptor (Angel of the North)…— Lee Nallalingham (@LNallalingham) May 4, 2026
If you’ve read the headline, you’ll know people have since taken issue with Nallalingham.
Big money
Nallalingham’s post reads in full (emphasis added):
EXPOSED: The Green Party say they’re not backed by the wealthy or big business.
Here are some of their donors:
Mark Constantine
Co-founder of Lush (900+ stores globally)
Est. net worth: £250m–£350m
Antony Gormley
Internationally renowned sculptor (Angel of the North)
Est. net worth: £40m+
Julian Dunkerton
Founder of Superdry (global fashion brand)
Est. net worth: £375m+
Matthew Oakeshott
Investment manager & property firm chairman
Est. net worth: £25m+
Sigrid Rausing
Tetra Pak heiress
Family wealth: £12.5bn
Vivienne Westwood
Late founder of global fashion brand
Former donor (est. net worth ~£40m at time of death)Corporate donors:
Lush Retail Ltd
Global cosmetics company
£800m+ turnover
Ecotricity Ltd
Major UK energy supplier
£500m+ revenue
Adam Management Holdings
Property investment firm
Multi-million pound assetsAll political parties take money from wealthy donors and businesses.
So why do they try to pretend otherwise?
It would be odd if the Greens said they’d not taken donations from wealthy donations given that the above is publicly available information. As Donation Watch reported:
How much has Green Party received in donations?
Green Party has received £5,798,813.46 in total donations from 770 documented donations.
Who are the top donors to Green Party?
The top donors to Green Party are: Vivienne Westwood (£307,000.00), Michael Taylor (£290,000.00), Mark Constantine (£269,650.00), Roger Manser (£195,000.00), and Raymond S Morris (£183,712.57).
What was the largest single donation to Green Party?
The largest single donation was £183,712.57 from Raymond S Morris on March 7, 2014.
Who is the biggest overall donor to Green Party?
The biggest overall donor to Green Party is Vivienne Westwood with total donations of £307,000.00.
Who has made the most donations to Green Party?
Marian Tucker has made the most donations to Green Party with 41 separate donations totaling £136,285.39.

So what have the Greens said then?
Anti-donor
Firstly, we should note that you do need to be cautious whenever money is changing hands.
We’re not telling you to let your guard down, or to trust that no one in the Green Party will ever make a decision based on donor money. What we are saying is the signs from the Greens are considerably more positive than from their rivals.
Here’s what Zack Polanski said in December 2025 after we learned Reform UK had received a £9m donation from a single donor:
Reform hoovering up vast sums of private donations isn’t a sign of political strength, but a sign of a weakness in the foundations of our democracy. When a single party can be bankrolled by a handful of wealthy individuals, it drowns out the voices of ordinary people and tilts the entire system towards the interests of those elites.
While it’s true the Greens do receive donations, they receive considerably less than their rivals, as Donation Watch has shown:

Instead of relying on donations, the Greens have instead formed a people-powered movement, in which results like the Gorton & Denton by-election are possible thanks to the dedication of everyday members.
The Greens’ reliance on members means it would actually work against their interests to suddenly start reversing their positions because donors demanded it — not something they could do regardless, because policy is dictated by members.
One further note is Your Party also tried to start a people-powered movement in 2025, but failed to capture the same momentum the Greens did.
This was despite Your Party receiving twice as much in political donations as the Greens. What this demonstrates is that this sort of political operation isn’t a simple case of people + money = success.
Polanski continued:
This is exactly why we need a cap on political donations. Democracy should never be for sale. Every party should compete on ideas, not on the size of their donor spreadsheet.
While Reform pockets eye-watering cheques, Greens are building a movement powered and funded by people through thousands of new members.
When we win elections, it will be because of the tens of thousands of people volunteered, not the people who donated tens of thousands. If we want a politics that serves the public, not billionaire backers, then capping donations is essential. Let’s end the influence of big money and put democracy back where it belongs: in the hands of voters.
Obviously, it’s a good sign when a party wants to cap political donations. If a political party can’t make progress without wealthy backers, it isn’t a ‘party’ at all, it’s a ‘front’ for corporate interests.
The wrong sort of donors
Another thing to consider is the sort of donors each party attracts. As we’ve covered before, Reform receives significant money from individuals linked to fossil fuels. As activist Chris Packham said:
More than $454 million went into the Republican campaign in 2024, more than $90 million went into Trump’s campaign. Here in the UK it’s not a secret the fossil fuel companies are funding Reform and the Conservatives. These people are either denying something which is extremely dangerous, or they’re puppeting for their paymasters.
It doesn’t end with fossil fuels either, as Ed Sykes reported for the Canary:
In 2025, Reform leader Nigel Farage promised a “crypto revolution”, saying the party would start to accept crypto donations. Reform has already received at least £12m from cryptocurrency investor Christopher Harborne alone. Harborne, who lives in Thailand, has long backed the British right, from the Tories to the Brexit Party.
Already in the pockets of shady big business interests, Farage has also been acting like a crypto lobbyist and fanatic in recent months.
Potentially the Greens will suddenly start announcing aggressively pro-soap policies which benefit their donors at Lush. If that happens, we’ll be sure to call them out.
Until then, the Greens clearly aren’t playing the same game as their rivals.
Featured image via the Canary
By Willem Moore
From Canary via This RSS Feed.



EXPOSED: The Green Party say they’re not backed by the wealthy or big business.
Mark Constantine