
Revelations continue to emerge about Nigel Farage’s finances. The latest scoop is that the Reform leader said he’d need £1m a year to return and lead the party. And this is all very interesting, because Farage went on to receive a £5m ‘gift’ just before a new 5-year parliamentary term began:
Excl: Farage said he would need ‘a million a year’ to stand as MP in 2024https://t.co/jSIvIKZ2GJ
— Anna Isaac (@Annaisaac) July 15, 2026
It’s all coming out
On the £5m gift, we previously reported:
Farage accepted the £5m gift from [Christopher] 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.
Now, the Guardian have revealed that Farage told senior Reform figures he’d need “a million a year” to return as a politician.
According to one of the sources, Farage said he could not put himself “through the wringer” of standing and “end up skint”. He also said he was being “properly paid” for the first time in years.
This is all notable, because the maths shows us:
- Farage returned in 2024 (with insiders claiming he was asked to fight the 2024 and 2029 elections).
- The timespan from 2024 to 2029 is five years.
- 5 x £1m = £5m.
In other words, Harborne gave the Reform leader precisely the amount Farage allegedly wanted. Despite this, as the Guardianhas reported:
Lawyers for Harborne referred the Guardian back to his previous statements about the £5m gift. They have previously said Harborne “expected nothing in return” and “did not envisage Mr Farage returning to politics”.
This raises fresh questions about the £5m gift from Harborne, which Farage has said was “unconditional”. Both have said it was given for security purposes in interviews with the Telegraph. Farage later separately said it was a “reward” for Brexit campaigning.
So this all looks suspicious, doesn’t it?
It is pure coincidence that I said I wasn’t standing for Parliament because I’d need “a million a year” to cover lost earnings, then I was given £5 million and immediately stood for election. pic.twitter.com/7koQztoFnP
— Parody Nigel Farage (@Parody_PM) July 15, 2026
Farage himself has veered between claiming the £5m gift was:
- A reward for Brexit.
- An unconditional present he could spend on whatever he likes.
- There to ensure he could afford to pay for private security for the rest of his life (a claim which doesn’t add up).
Farage investigation paused
Farage is facing a parliamentary investigation into the £5m gift. Said investigation has paused while the Clacton by-election takes place, but it will resume once it’s over, regardless of whether Farage wins (our money is on Count Binface, although admittedly we only put a fiver down).
At this point the Clacton by-election is looking like a worse and worse idea. The longer it takes for the parliamentary investigation to start, the more facts they’ll have to investigate. And the stream of leaks is making things look worse for Farage.
The Guardian of course have just made the Standards investigation a slam dunk pic.twitter.com/HAlnTlYAqv
— dave lawrence
(@dave43law) July 15, 2026
Featured image via the Canary
By Willem Moore
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(@dave43law)