Senior U.K. lawmakers are calling for an immediate halt to cryptocurrency political donations, citing national security risks tied to foreign interference and opaque funding flows.
The push comes from Parliament’s Joint Committee on the National Security Strategy (JCNSS), which argues that digital assets introduce vulnerabilities that traditional finance (TradFi) rules struggle to monitor.
In a Feb. 23 letter, JCNSS Chair Matt Western urged the government to impose a temporary moratorium until clearer safeguards are in place. The recommendation gained further weight in the committee’s March 18 report, which describes crypto donations as an “unacceptably high risk” to political finance integrity.
At the heart of the concern is crypto’s ability to move quickly across borders while masking origin. Lawmakers warn that tools such as mixers, chain-hopping, and micro-donations can obscure the true source of funds, raising the specter of foreign money quietly entering U.K. politics.
The committee’s report does not mince words. It calls for a binding moratorium to be added to the Representation of the People Bill, remaining in effect until the Electoral Commission establishes enforceable guidance.
Western’s earlier letter outlined interim guardrails if donations continue. These include requiring political parties to use Financial Conduct Authority-registered providers, banning anonymizing tools, and converting crypto into sterling within 48 hours.
The Electoral Commission currently permits crypto donations, treating them as non-cash assets. However, it has acknowledged “particular challenges” in verifying donor legitimacy and has encouraged parties to exercise caution, especially with privacy-enhancing technologies.
Despite mounting pressure, the government has so far declined to act immediately. In a response published in early March, Secretary of State Steve Reed pointed to ongoing reviews, including the Rycroft Review, as the preferred path toward reform.
That wait-and-see approach has not impressed everyone in Westminster. Some lawmakers argue that delaying action leaves a wide-open window for misuse, particularly as geopolitical tensions remain elevated.
The debate has also been fueled by scrutiny of crypto donations linked to political groups such as Reform UK. While no wrongdoing has been confirmed, the controversy has sharpened concerns about transparency and oversight.
Beyond the U.K., lawmakers are looking at precedents abroad. Ireland effectively prohibits crypto donations, while some U.S. states and Brazil have imposed strict limits, reinforcing the argument that tighter controls are not without precedent.
Critics of a ban, including some industry voices, argue that regulation—not prohibition—is the smarter move. They contend that forcing crypto activity underground could make tracking even harder.
For now, the issue sits squarely in Parliament’s hands, with potential amendments to the Representation of the People Bill likely to shape the next phase of the debate.