Images of Nigel Farage and a large money bag

On Tuesday, Nigel Farage shocked Britain by resigning as an MP. He then shocked the country again by vowing to run for the seat he’d just stepped down from. Clearly, then, the conniving ex-banker was up to something.

Since his resignation, the Guardian has released a story into Farage’s finances. It’s not just the story that is important, though; it’s also the timing.

This gives today’s events fresh context. Farage knew this story was dropping today. And wanted to deflect by it. Also tried to spike the Guardian by passing to another paper. Even more serious questions for Reform to answer. Especially because the phrase “money laundering” keeps… https://t.co/Q4oVFoNhYY

— (((Dan Hodges))) (@DPJHodges) July 7, 2026

Farage received money for nothing?

The scandal we’re looking at is the undeclared £5 million ‘gift’ that Farage accepted from Christopher Harborne. As we previously reported:

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.

We’re clarifying which scandal because the man has several on the go:

Back to the Guardian’s latest, it’s reporting:

The £5m gift to Nigel Farage by a cryptocurrency billionaire was reported to the National Crime Agency by bankers who were concerned it may have been laundered money, the Guardian can reveal.

Importantly, it added:

Farage was given a deadline of 1pm on Tuesday to respond to the Guardian about this article. He gave a video address at 2pm announcing he would force a by-election in his seat of Clacton-on-Sea.

This has led to much speculation as to why Farage pulled the by-election lever now.

Nigel Farage clearly timed his by-election because he knew this story would drop.

Reform have also leaked it to the Daily Telegraph – who have written a truly embarrassingly pro-Reform propaganda piece. https://t.co/sZ5ZJIXmxO

— Owen Jones (@owenjonesjourno) July 7, 2026

A great pity that the paper behind the expenses scandal has debased itself by campaigning against the Guardian and Sunday Times doing investigative journalism into the finances of politicians https://t.co/Hh8Axqa267

— Helena Horton (@horton_official) July 7, 2026

Farage’s move isn’t going down well with the public either.

I genuinely think Nigel Farage may actually be forced to reverse-ferret on this. He’s going to become a national laughing stock. There is genuinely no knowing what percentage he will get v Count BinFace given a likely low turnout. All the campaign will be about is his financial… https://t.co/038NqsNLy2

— (((Dan Hodges))) (@DPJHodges) July 8, 2026

There’s always more

There are other theories about Farage’s move too. Krishnan Guru-Murthy thinks the “reset” will allow Farage to avoid future scrutiny:

A Farage reset will mean the clock on his declarations also resets – so if there are other declarable “gifts” he received in the year before the 2024 election that we don’t know about he will no longer have to tell anyone. The inquiry into the £5 million – when it resumes – could ask him direct questions about that – but he may or may not answer

In other words, while the investigation into the undeclared £5 million could still go ahead, there won’t be investigations into any other undeclared lump sums from the 12 months before the 2024 election. Still, the investigation into the £5 million should continue.

This is key. https://t.co/JzpeAzpj6l

— emily m (@maitlis) July 7, 2026

There are also new scandals emerging.

While the Telegraph is taking flack for scooping the Guardian — seemingly in cahoots with Reform — the party has released an exposé of its own. As it turns out, the mother of Posh George directed £1 million to a company owned by Richard Tice. Half of this money was later donated to Reform. Oh, and Tice also took an £80,000 loan from Posh George.

In other words, if Farage does step down at some point, we don’t think Tice will be in a strong position to replace him. And the man is having a meltdown over this, accusing the National Crime Agency (NCA) of illegally leaking information.

If the NCA did leak the information, that would be bad, of course. But if Tice committed some sort of financial crime, two wrongs won’t make a right.

Chaos with Nigel Farage

As of right now, Nigel Farage’s only opponent in the Clacton by-election will be Count Binface. Well, Binface and the constant accusations of dubious behaviour, anyway. Accusations which will continue to hound him regardless of how the by-election stunt plays out.

In other words, don’t expect him to contest the next general election — certainly not from a position of strength, anyway.

Featured image via the Canary

By Willem Moore


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