Jenrick's unlawful donor favour. Farage's £5m crypto gift. £1.4bn wasted on Covid VIP lane contracts. Britain's politics is for sale. The fix costs just a bag of crisps each.
Cleaning up politics

Clean up the public's trust in politics for the price of a bag of crips per person.
Latest Cleaning up politics articles
Dale Vince urges Labour to ban all private political donations. New polling shows two-thirds of Britons back a cap and pressure is mounting inside parliament.
A Babelfish investigation: 80% of Reform UK's £15m in donations last year came from 18 donors linked to offshore tax havens. Follow the money, find the truth.
Exclusive Survation polling for Babelfish: 71% would back a total ban on political donations in a referendum, and just 22% think the current system is fair.
Just £50m a year in private donations controls the £3trillion UK economy. Public funding would cost the price of a packet of crisps per person. So why don't we?
Britain has over 150 billionaires, and no cap on what they can give a political party. The government's new bill is a historic chance to close the door for good.
Farage promised Dubai's elite "a Reform London will remember you" - on an undeclared trip hosted by billionaires who also entertain the Tate brothers.
A previously unpublished email shows the civil servant running the Tory VIP lane warned it was disrupting PPE supply and risking taxpayer billions. He was ignored.
Nigel Farage took a secret £5m gift from a Thai-based crypto tycoon — on top of £22m more. British democracy isn't just for sale. It's already been bought.
What if UK parties got £50 per paid-up member from the state instead of chasing mega-donors? The Autonomy Institute's plan would cost £50m a year - and clean up politics.
A modest cut to the Sovereign Grant could free £66m a year — enough to publicly fund UK political parties and break the grip of mega-donors. Here's how.
For every £1 donated to UK parties, donor firms get £1,294 back in government contracts. The Autonomy Institute's plan ends private money and rebuilds public trust.
France banned corporate donations in 1995. Canada caps individual donations at £930. Five democracies show the UK how to stop mega-donors buying influence.
A handful of billionaires have pumped £170m into Britain's populist right. Labour can't beat Reform by copying them, only by telling voters the honest truth.
















