Nigel Farage and George Cottrell

According to a new report from the Times, Nigel Farage failed to declare that he received money for from a shady donor with links to the crypto industry. If you’re thinking ‘we already knew that‘, we regret to inform you that this is an entirely different backer than the other guy:

EXCLUSIVE

Nigel Farage failed to declare that a criminal and crypto gambler paid for his staff, security, drivers, social media output in year before election

Reform leader has also received free accommodation in Westminster from George Cottrell as MPhttps://t.co/fSKszEDnV1

— Gabriel Pogrund (@Gabriel_Pogrund) July 4, 2026

Undeclareds all the way down

As Pogrund said, the donor in question is George Cottrell. Cottrell is an aristocrat with a criminal record who’s involved ” in an offshore crypto gambling platform implicated in potential criminal betting in the UK”. As you might have guessed, he’s currently angling for a pardon from president Donald Trump – a good friend of Farage’s.

There are two key issues for Farage:

  • Cottrell’s criminal record.
  • The fact that Farage didn’t declare the benefits after being elected.

This is once again putting Farage in the spotlight. Which is bad news for him, of course, because the last six months have shown he can’t stand the heat when he’s the one getting cooked:

Front page of The Sunday Times from @Gabriel_Pogrund and the Insight team.

Revealed: Nigel Farage secretly funded by convicted criminal pic.twitter.com/FShK31v4Ez

— George Mann (@sgfmann) July 4, 2026

As Pogrom added:

Rules say any benefits received in 12 months before election – and that benefits exceeding £300 potentially related to politics – must be declared

The Times piece itself provided further details on what Farage received, noting:

The Reform leader received “in kind” benefits ranging from his back office to his private security, staff, transport and accommodation.

Unless Farage produces convincing explanations, and there’s no evidence yet that he can, his political career is finished.

— Peter Oborne (@OborneTweets) July 4, 2026

‘Security’ is very interesting, because Farage also claimed the £5m ‘gift’ he received from crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne was to pay for his security.

Farage claimed Harborne’s £5 million was to pay for his security….

But Cottrell was paying for his security already….oh & much more.

On Day 1 you are told to disclose all and any financial donations over £300 from the year leading up to your election….

Farage is a grifter. https://t.co/Un6vDCWd75

— Alicia Kearns MP (@aliciakearns) July 4, 2026

If you’re unfamiliar with that story, we reported the following:

Farage accepted the £5m gift from Harborne – a crypto billionaire – in 2024. At the time, he’d said he wouldn’t run in the general election, but this changed after he received the £5m. The problem is that after he became an MP, he was supposed to declare any ‘registrable benefits’ from the previous 12 months. Farage did not declare the £5m, and now it looks like he was purposefully trying to hide it.

This means Farage now has multiple instances in which he seemingly should have declared benefits and cash gifts, but he did not. Farage is already being investigated over the £5m; he could now be investigated over the Cottrell benefits. If these investigations don’t go his way, he could be suspended, forcing a by-election in his Clacton constituency.

Cue the world’s tiniest violin.

Posh George

The Times exposé contains more detail on Cottrell, including:

like Harborne, Cottrell stands to gain from his relationship with Farage. He is a crypto-gambling entrepreneur involved in an offshore bookmaker, Tether.bet, which uses a digital currency part-owned by Harborne, according to US court documents. Cottrell denies he expected any benefit from his relationship with the Reform leader.

Reporting on these potential ‘gains’, Ed Sykes wrote for the Canary:

The standards watchdog commissioner has received a request to investigate whether Nigel Farage lobbied the Bank of England on his billionaire sugar daddy’s behalf.

As noted in the piece, Farage lobbied the Bank of England to to abandon plans for a British crypto coin. And this stinks, because such a coin would have negatively impacted a figure like Harborne.

The Times also reported:

It is unclear what due diligence, if any, Farage performed before accepting Cottrell’s help. Farage knew he was a convicted felon because the pair were travelling back from a Trump rally in Cleveland, Ohio, in July 2016 when Cottrell was arrested and charged with 21 offences for his role in a “dark web” money laundering plot. He later pleaded guilty to wire fraud and spent time in prison in Arizona.

Oh, and if you’re wondering how Cottrell worked his way into Farage’s inner orbit:

After volunteering in an Essex by-election in 2015, Cottrell proved himself a talented fundraiser and a natural Farage whisperer, capable of determining when his boss wanted a cigarette, a pint, a moment’s peace, or, a “PFL” — a proper f***ing lunch. His cut-glass accent, regular claims to have a trust fund of £250 million and willingness to buy drinks, were a source of amusement, but he also worked tirelessly for Farage. The pair became close. Farage said he was like a “son” to him.

Like many in modern politics, Cottrell would go on to make serious money through questionable means; that money would later fund a host of benefits for Farage.

The question now is why Farage failed to declare it, when there’s clearly cause to suspect that Cottrell could have suspected something in return.

Farage — “Finished”

We quoted ‘finished’ in the headline of the piece, but we’re not quoting any one individual; we’re quoting a legion of them:

Farage is finished https://t.co/jfMNnatJgd

— Harry Eccles (@Heccles94) July 4, 2026

While we can’t say this will be the final nail in Farage’s coffin, we can say this; there are an awful lot of nails at this point.

Featured image via the Canary

By Willem Moore


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