
Some scandals bounce off a politician and some bury them. After more than a decade watching this happen up close, I can tell you the deciding factor is almost never the size of the original sin.
It’s whether the story changes who the public thinks you are. And that’s the test Nigel Farage is failing for the first time.
Every previous storm – whether on his behaviour as a schoolboy, his controversial comments, or his earnings outside parliament – have rolled off him because voters had already decided what he was.
A chancer, a show-off, a bloke who says what the ‘silent majority’ are thinking.
And crucially, somehow, he managed to present himself as someone not for the money.
Love him or hate him, he was never quite seen as another Westminster trougher – in fact he always made much of the fact that leaving the City for politics actually made him poorer.
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That was the shield. And it’s finally cracking.
Farage was already under a parliamentary standards investigation over a £5million pre-election gift from Christopher Harborne, a crypto billionaire, that he didn’t declare when he won his Clacton seat.
Then came yesterday’s story. The Sunday Times reported George Cottrell, a convicted fraudster, had supplied the Reform UK leader with benefits including security and staffing.
Cottrell, known as ‘posh George’ spent eight months in a US prison, having made a plea deal after originally facing 21 counts related to money laundering, fraud, blackmail, and extortion.
Lovely stuff.
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And this same man reportedly paid for Farage’s security, his staff and his accommodation in the run-up to the 2024 election.
Reform has slammed the Sunday Times for dredging up old stories, implying that the Rupert Murdoch owned publication, of all places, was simply doing Labour’s dirty work for them.
Farage says no rules were broken and calls it ‘baseless and contrived.’
There may yet be an investigation by parliamentary authorities that disagrees, but either way, the case for Farage’s defence tells us a lot about his current political fortunes.
But watch how it was defended, because that’s where the damage lives. First Farage insisted the £5 million donated by a Thai-based crypto billionaire was for security. Then it was a reward for Brexit.
Then, finally, in a round of tetchy interviews last week, Farage said it was ‘none of [our] business’ – he could spend it on ‘Ferraris’ if he wanted.
And there it is. We are finally seeing the mask slipping in real time. And if he tries the same approach to this latest scandal, he might find his previous untouchability less assured.
Farage has spent years copying his hero Donald Trump. Never apologise, never explain, hold out until the press gets bored.
But this isn’t America, and on this side of the Atlantic, our politics appears to be a little more resistant.
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Farage’s success rests on his persona of the honest outsider, however deeply disingenuous that characterisation may be.
‘None of your business’ is precisely the thing an honest outsider is never supposed to say.
Ice cold Farage, for once, looks like he’s sweating.
Not least because of the hypocrisy at play.
In 2024, Reform UK was gleefully branding Keir Starmer ‘Free Gear Kier,’ over the soon to be ex-Prime Minister accepting a wardrobe, some glasses and the use of a flat from a Labour donor.
Starmer never really recovered from the freebies and has been unceremoniously shoved towards the exit by his own party.
Now weigh it up. Starmer took clothes from a peer. Farage is accused of taking millions, plus security and staff, from a crypto billionaire and a convicted fraudster – and won’t say exactly what for.
For most of his career Farage has ridden out anything because Reform wasn’t a party, it was him.
There was nobody to lead a revolt. That’s changing.
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Robert Jenrick – who once vowed to send Farage ‘back to retirement’ before defecting to his party – has pointedly called the £5 million a ‘legitimate’ question, before backtracking.
That wasn’t the Reform line, and he knows it – but a coup seems unlikely for now.
So the real threat isn’t the men in grey suits. It’s the voters. Reform underperformed at last month’s Makerfield by-election, and insiders suggest Farage’s mysterious backers were a factor.
If the commissioner finds a serious enough breach, he could be suspended from the Commons and face a recall petition in Clacton – the exact mechanism he’s spent his whole career urging voters to use on MPs they’ve had enough of.
That’s the part he can’t spin. Farage built a movement and a career by telling us to sack their MPs, to take back control, to never trust a politician who treats Westminster like a personal cash machine.
Now he’s the one with his arms crossed, refusing to say where the money came from.
I tell everyone I work for the same thing every time: it’s never the scandal, it’s always the response that follows.
And last week tells you everything. Farage is truly rattled. For politicians, that rarely ends well.
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