Labour wants to talk about cleaning up politics. Don't listen. What they're actually proposing is rigging the system to protect their own position.
The government has unveiled plans for new party donation rules. A £100,000 cap on donations from British citizens living overseas. A ban on cryptocurrency contributions. This isn't transparency. This is a targeted attack on Reform UK's funding model, designed to hobble the one party that's genuinely challenging their grip on power.
Reform UK Is the Threat They Fear
Why now? Why these specific rules? Because Reform UK is polling at 266 predicted seats in the next election. We're ahead of both Labour and the Conservatives on voting intention. We're winning in places Labour thought were safe.
Labour knows they can't beat Reform UK on ideas. So they're trying to beat us in the funding game. These rules exist to stop Reform UK rising. Full stop.
Look at who they hurt most. Reform UK has supporters all over the world. British expats, international business figures, people who believe in our mission. A £100,000 cap targets donors from overseas. It targets us.
But Labour's Union Funding Stays Untouched
And here's the outrage: Labour's funding from trade unions remains completely unrestricted. Unite, Unison, the GMB — they pour tens of millions into Labour's machine. No caps. No restrictions. Nothing changes for them.
So the rule isn't really about transparency or fairness. It's about protecting Labour's donors while blocking ours. It's about locking in advantage for the party already in power. That's not democracy. That's oligarchy.
Cryptocurrency Ban: Technical Censorship
The cryptocurrency ban is equally revealing. Crypto donations are transparent — they're on the blockchain, traceable, public. More transparent than a brown envelope stuffed with cash. But they're modern. They're new. They appeal to younger voters, to people outside the Westminster system.
Labour doesn't want that. They want politics to run through the old channels. The union bosses. The traditional power brokers. Not through tech-savvy people raising funds in new ways.
This ban isn't about fighting corruption. It's about controlling the narrative and the funding sources they don't understand.
What Reform UK Would Do
Reform UK supports genuine transparency and accountability in political funding. We'd implement real open-book accounting for all parties. Every donation over £500 published in real-time on a public register. No hidden offshore trusts. No complex structures. Total transparency.
But we'd do it equally for everyone. Labour's union funding, our overseas supporters, Conservative donations — all treated the same. No exemptions. No special pleading. Just honest, open accountability.
And we'd stop trying to pick winners and losers. The current system — where the party in power can rewrite the rules to suit themselves — is exactly what's wrong with British democracy.
This Is How Parties Protecting Power Act
Labour is scared. They see Reform UK rising and they're throwing everything at it. Tax audits. Donation caps. Cryptocurrency bans. Selective application of rules.
This is what happens when a government fears real opposition. They don't debate ideas. They rig the playing field. They make rules that protect themselves and hurt their rivals.
Working people deserve better. They deserve parties competing on ideas and policies, not on who can write rules in their own favour. That's what Reform UK will deliver when we're in power.