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George and Fiona Cottrell interviewed under caution by Met police

Created at 10 Jul · 5:46 PM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

George Cottrell, an aide to Nigel Farage, and his mother Fiona Cottrell have been interviewed under caution by Metropolitan police detectives as part of an investigation into donations to the Reform UK party ahead of the 2024 UK general election.

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Key Numbers

£1mdonation to Reform UK fundraising vehicle
£500,000donation to Reform UK
May 2024donation date
June 2024donation date
July 2024UK general election date
February 2025start of Met inquiry
50 yearsRichard Tice's acquaintance with Cottrell family
£5mdonation from Christopher Harborne to Nigel Farage

Who's Involved

George Cottrell
Nigel Farage's aide, interviewed under caution
Fiona Cottrell
George Cottrell's mother, interviewed under caution
Metropolitan police
Conducting criminal investigation into Reform UK donations
Reform UK
Political party under investigation for donations
Richard Tice
Deputy leader of Reform UK
Nigel Farage
Received £5m donation prior to general election
Christopher Harborne
Cryptocurrency billionaire who donated to Nigel Farage
Crown Prosecution Service
Provided early investigative advice to the Met

↳ Why This Matters

The interviews and ongoing investigation into Reform UK's donations raise questions about the party's financial transparency and compliance with electoral law, potentially impacting its political standing and public trust.

Key facts

  • George Cottrell, aide to Nigel Farage, and his mother Fiona Cottrell were interviewed under criminal caution by Metropolitan police.
  • The interviews are part of an investigation into donations to Reform UK prior to the July 2024 UK general election.
  • The investigation focuses on alleged offences under Section 61 of the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000.
  • The Met police investigation, which began in February 2025, is examining broader financial issues related to Reform UK.
  • Reports indicate the inquiry may stem from a £1m donation by Fiona Cottrell to a Reform UK fundraising vehicle in May 2024.

George Cottrell, an aide to Nigel Farage, and his mother Fiona Cottrell have been interviewed under criminal caution by Metropolitan police detectives. The interviews are understood to be part of an ongoing investigation into donations made to the Reform UK party ahead of the July 2024 UK general election.

The investigation, which began in February 2025, is examining alleged offences under Section 61 of the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000, which pertains to the evasion of restrictions on political donors. The Metropolitan police's special inquiry team is reportedly seeking documents from financial institutions as part of the inquiry.

Reports suggest the investigation may be linked to a £1m donation made by Fiona Cottrell to a fundraising vehicle for Reform UK in May 2024, with £500,000 of this transferred to the party shortly before the election. Reform UK's deputy leader, Richard Tice, stated he was unaware of the investigation into the donation and described media reports as a "politically motivated smear campaign", asserting Fiona Cottrell is a permissible donor.

This scrutiny of Reform UK's funding follows previous revelations that Nigel Farage received a £5m donation from cryptocurrency billionaire Christopher Harborne before announcing his candidacy. Political leaders across the spectrum have called for greater transparency from the party regarding its finances.

Frequently asked questions

George Cottrell is an aide to Nigel Farage and is known as "posh George". He has been interviewed under caution by the Metropolitan police as part of an investigation into Reform UK's donations.

The PPERA is designed to prevent the evasion of restrictions on political donors. It makes it an offence to facilitate donations from non-permissible donors or to knowingly provide false information about the source or amount of a donation with intent to deceive.

A criminal caution is a formal warning given by police to someone suspected of committing a crime. It protects the rights of the interviewee, and anything said during the caution interview can be used as evidence.

The £1m donation by Fiona Cottrell to a Reform UK fundraising vehicle, with half transferred to the party weeks before the election, is reportedly a key focus of the ongoing police investigation into the party's finances.

What Happens Next

01The Met police investigation is expected to continue for many more months.
02Police are seeking disclosure and documents from banks and financial institutions.

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Cadence

How It Developed

George and Fiona Cottrell were interviewed under criminal caution by Metropolitan police detectives.
The interviews are part of an ongoing investigation into donations made to Reform UK before the July 2024 general election.
The investigation examines alleged offences under Section 61 of the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000.
The Met police investigation began in February 2025 and is examining financial issues relating to Reform UK.
The investigation reportedly stems from a £1m donation made to a Reform UK fundraising vehicle by Fiona Cottrell in May 2024.
Reform UK's deputy leader, Richard Tice, stated he was unaware of the £1m donation being investigated and described the funding articles as a "politically motivated smear campaign".
The funding of Reform UK has faced scrutiny following reports of a £5m donation from cryptocurrency billionaire Christopher Harborne to Nigel Farage.

Sources

T1
George and Fiona Cottrell understood to have been interviewed under caution by Met policeThe Guardian

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