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#UKToSuspendCryptoPoliticalDonations
Britain just quietly shut the door on crypto in politics — here is what actually happened.
On March 25, Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced a full moratorium on cryptocurrency donations to political parties, effective immediately pending parliamentary approval. The move follows an independent review led by Philip Rycroft, a former Home Office permanent secretary, who was tasked with investigating foreign financial interference in British democracy.
The trigger was blunt: a former Reform UK politician was jailed for accepting bribes to deliver pro-Russia speeches. That, combined with the fact that Reform UK — Nigel Farage's party — had become the first British party to openly accept Bitcoin donations, and was pulling roughly two-thirds of its funding from donors based abroad, made the review almost inevitable.
Beyond the crypto ban, British citizens living overseas will now face an annual cap of £100,000 on political donations, a ceiling that directly threatens the roughly £12 million Reform received last year from overseas-based investors, including a Thai-based donor named Christopher Harborne.
The rationale from Rycroft is straightforward: crypto donations are harder to trace, easier to route through opaque structures, and therefore carry a higher risk of disguising foreign influence. The government framed it as a national security issue, not a technology one.
What this tells the broader crypto space is worth noting. Even in a country that has been actively courting crypto firms and positioning itself as a digital asset hub, the anonymity and cross-border fluidity of crypto is still viewed as a political liability the moment it touches electoral finance. The industry's push for legitimacy and the government's instinct to lock down campaign funding transparency are now in direct tension — and in this round, transparency won.