Farage spent years honing Reform’s brand. Now he’s trashing it
The old adage “follow the money” is haunting Nigel Farage with particular vengeance these days.
The feisty Reform leader’s dealings with George Cottrell, a maverick society figure and benefactor to Reform UK before the last election, is the latest expensive embarrassment for a party which aims to break the mould of British politics. Instead, Farage stands accused of flouting funding and transparency rules – and that is becoming a habit, rather than a happenstance.
Farage has been referred to Parliament’s standards watchdog for the second time this year, over new reports that he failed to declare financial support from a convicted criminal. He allegedly took payments and benefits in kind from Cottrell – aka “Posh George,” a society figure with a chequered history.
Even putting Cottrell’s credentials politely, his record as a “crypto-gambling entrepreneur” might raise a few red flags for the “turquoise army” of Reform as it boasts its credentials to form a future government.
Reform is certainly not the only party to have skirted close to the rule on the difference between gifts and donations. Nor the only party to have taken a skimpy view of requirements to reveal funding sources from acolytes helping them run for office. But a second controversy, so soon after Farage was referred to a standards inquiry over his £5m donation from British-Thai crypto tycoon Christopher Harborne, is now creating anxieties on his own team about how to persuade a charismatic, impervious leader that this is a problem he needs to deal with, rather than a........
