Review of foreign financial interference in UK politics to be published, with ban on crypto donations expected – UK politics live


What joint committee on national security strategy said about case for ban on crypto donations to parties

This is what parliament’s joint committee on the national security strategy said about the case for banning cryptocurrency donations to political parties in a report on political finance and foreign influence published last week.

double quotation markCrypto donations pose an unnecessary and unacceptably high risk to the integrity of the political finance system and public trust in it. We accept that future regulations may institutionalise the use of alternative payment systems for use in donations. At present, however, the opportunity to evade rules is too high, the adequacy of mitigations too low, and the resource cost of attempting to implement acceptable oversight is disproportionate. We see no democratic imperative to permit the use of crypto in political finance until adequate safeguards are in place.

Crypto also poses wider upstream risks to the integrity of political finance: donors can convert ‘dirty’ foreign crypto funds into ‘clean’ UK fiat and then donate it without arousing much suspicion. A ‘last mile’ ban on crypto donations is therefore not a panacea. Specialist capabilities to address upstream risks are underpowered and require further work.

The government should introduce a binding moratorium on crypto donations as an amendment to the representation of the people bill. This moratorium should remain in place until the Electoral Commission has issued statutory guidance on crypto donations which applies to its regulated entities.

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Key events

Wes Streeting defends Treasury indicating energy support package would help poorer families, not richer ones

Yesterday Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, indicated that, if the government has to introduce an energy support package later this year because of the ongoing impact of the Iran war, it will be targeted at low-income households.

Predictably, in the rightwing papers, this has been written up as an attack on the “middle classes”. Here is the Daily Mail splash.

Mail splash Photograph: Daily Mail

And the Daily Telegraph’s take is very similar; its story is headlined “Middle classes set to miss out on Reeves energy bill support.”

Wes Streeting, the health secretary, was giving interviews this morning, and he defended the chancellor’s approach. Asked on the Today programme if it was true that the middle classes would take a hit, he replied:

double quotation markPut a different way, I will be feeling, as a higher earner in this country, a difference in my living costs.

Will they be pinching me in the pockets in the same way that they might impact on my mum, who is a cleaner on the minimum wage? No.

Asked if this was fair, he stressed that the war was to blame.

double quotation markLook, we know that the public finances are in a precarious situation. That’s what we inherited.

We know that the economy has had to go through a huge amount of strain over the last decade, partly as a result of things like the pandemic, partly as a result of reckless political choices like Liz Truss’s mini-budget, and the challenge the chancellor has is, she’s got to try and drive improvement in the economy, confronting the world as it is, not as we would wish it to be.

And I can’t tell you how much my heart sank when the chancellor was delivering the spring statement only weeks ago, where she was able to talk confidently about falling interest rates, falling inflation, wages finally rising faster than the cost-of-living as a result of the choices she is making, knowing full well, as she did, we all did, that what was going on in Iran would make those numbers and that improvement much harder, but she’s confronting that challenge head-on.

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