Reform UK don’t like it when a bit of scrutiny comes the way of their glorious leader, do they? As Nigel Farage continues to face justifiable questions about why a crypto billionaire decided to send him £5,000,000, Reform voices are complaining about him being ‘hounded’ by the media…
The £5m gift that Farage can’t shake
No matter how much he may try and bat away questions about it, the secret £5m Farage received from Christopher Harborne has become the story that simply won’t go away for the Reform leader.
It all started earlier this year when the Guardian revealed that Farage had received the sum from Thailand-based Harborne in 2024, just weeks before he announced his U-turn decision to stand in the general election that summer.
READ NEXT: Nigel Farage ‘worried about facing Clacton by-election’ over £5m gift
Farage did not declare the sum, which he has described as an “unconditional gift.” Commons rules state that newly elected MPs are required to declare any benefits or financial support connected to their political activities in the year before an election.
Parliament’s standards commissioner has launched an investigation into whether Farage should have declared the sum.
At the same time, Farage’s story about the sum has changed a bit. He has both claimed the money was given to him so he could pay for his own private security and that it was a reward for years of Brexit campaigning.
Last month, he refused to tell outlets and news channels what he has spent the money on, saying he could ‘spend it on Ferraris’ if he wanted to.
Until Farage starts fronting up about this £5m, the questions and scrutiny are going to continue. And his Reform fanboys don’t like it one bit.
‘Farage is being hounded’
From free spectacles Keir Starmer received to Angela Rayner’s council tax, they’re more than happy to dish it out. But they’re not so happy when they get a taste of their own medicine.
Take Tory-turned-Reform MP Danny Kruger. In a post on social media this week, he said Farage and his family were being ‘hounded over their personal finances and living arrangements.’
This came after a report in the Times that Farage and his partner own at least five homes, but that only two are declared on the Clacton MP’s register of interest.
Kruger said the reporting is a “transparent attempt by established power – in the government and the media – to disable Reform because of the threat the party poses to their privileges.”
He continued: “All these attacks haven’t revealed a single incidence of wrongdoing. They’re playing the man and not the ball. The British public will see that, and see it is unfair, and it won’t work.”
Many were quick to remind Kruger that Farage is simply facing the same level of scrutiny given to many political figures. This is of course the man who wants to be the country’s next prime minister.
Other’s pointed out that when it’s Reform’s opponents under pressure, they’re more than happy to weigh in.
It wasn’t just Kruger who was moaning about the spotlight being on Farage.
Not satisfied with embarrassing himself in the Gorton and Denton by-election, Matt Goodwin is still crowing on.
In a laughable statement, Goodwin said media reports about Farage were a “coordinated attempt by establishment forces to try and shut down the only successful opposition to their agenda.”
Again, people pointed out the hypocrisy of a Reform supporter moaning about press attacks.
If Reform are serious about wanting to be the next government that leads this country, they’re going to have to get used to a bit more scrutiny – and get better at dealing with it.
