Nigel Farage's Elusive Stance Since £5m Crypto Gift Revealed
En resumen
- Nigel Farage has remained largely out of the public eye for seven weeks following the revelation of a £5m crypto gift, cancelling events and limiting interviews.
- His party, Reform UK, is reportedly losing ground to a harder-right rival, and Farage's recent re-emergence was tightly controlled, with select media present and questions limited.
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Por qué importa
Nigel Farage has been largely absent from public view for seven weeks since a £5m personal gift from a crypto billionaire was revealed. This follows a period where AI-generated images of him have been prevalent online, and a real depiction was shown in violent circumstances on BBC's Question Time.
Fake images of Nigel Farage have been ubiquitous online lately – but the real politician has proved far more elusive since it was revealed seven weeks ago that he took a £5m personal gift from a crypto billionaire.
And while an AI-generated depiction of the Reform UK leader was falsely shown getting violent on BBC’s Question Time, Farage has been largely avoiding the TV studios where he might face questions over the cash.
He has given a handful of interviews to selected outlets addressing the donation – to the Telegraph where he claimed it was for security, to the Sun where he said it was a reward for Brexit, to Sky News where he described it as “waste of time”, and to the Mail on Sunday where he claimed without evidence that Russian hackers had leaked the information.
Beyond this, Farage has otherwise remained unusually quiet – cancelling a rally in Sunderland and instead producing short clips for social media, including one inflammatory intervention from a field in which he called for “pure, cold rage” in response to Henry Nowak’s murder.
Until Wednesday morning, Reform had not held a single press conference for almost 50 days – which the party said was because attendance had been dropping, and they wanted to show it was more than a Farage-led one man band.
Richard Tice, the party’s deputy leader, faced repeated questions about the leader’s whereabouts when he gave a press conference about littering on Wednesday morning, and insisted that his boss was not dodging accountability.
However, staying out of the limelight does not come easily to Farage, when his media strategy for years has involved occupying space on the airwaves and creating news with stunts and controversy.
The cost of Farage lying low has been high for the party politically. Reform performed very well at the local elections on 7 May, taking 14 councils and more than 1,000 seats. But since then, it has been losing ground to Restore Britain – an even harder right party led by Rupert Lowe – whose acolytes push a policy of “remigration”.
His 50 days of staying out of the limelight came to an end on Wednesday as he made an unexpected re-emergence in Makerfield, but the terms of his appearance were very much dictated by necessity.
With an hour’s notice, the party announced on social media that Farage would be alongside Robert Kenyon, the party’s byelection candidate, to announce a policy supporting white van tradesmen.
The Reform UK leader highlighted red tape faced by small businesses and dismissed Restore Britain as only popular because it is being pushed on X by Elon Musk, but only select media organisations were present.
The Guardian was not invited to the press conference and was told on arrival that it would not be permitted to ask a question because it had not submitted official accreditation.
As a result, Farage faced no questions about the donation from Harborne. The Daily Mail’s reporter asked Farage two gentle questions about the extreme views of Restore Britain, and whether it was Labour’s Andy Burnham who was avoiding scrutiny during the campaign.
Meanwhile, broadcasters were focused on the news of the day – including Farage’s response to the violence in Belfast, and his Makerfield candidate’s controversial social media comments.
Preguntas abiertas
- What is the exact nature and purpose of the £5m crypto donation?
- Why has Nigel Farage been avoiding traditional media interviews?
- What is the long-term impact of Farage's reduced media presence on Reform UK's political standing?
- Will Reform UK be able to regain momentum against rivals like Restore Britain?






