Reform UK gets £9m in donations in first quarter of 2026, including £7m from two crypto billionaires – UK politics live

Reform UK gets £9m in donations in first quarter of 2026, including £7m from two crypto billionaires – UK politics live


Minister dismisses ‘two-tier justice’ claim in light of Henry Nowak tragedy as ‘slur’ on police

Good morning. The most interesting event of the day may well turn out to be one taking place late tonight, when Andy Burnham, the Labour candidate for Makerfield and potential next PM, takes part in a BBC byelection Question Time special. Yesterday, Burnham said that at some point today he would give a more considered response to the Henry Nowak murder, and the issues it has raised about policing and race equality. It is not clear yet whether we will get that response on QT, or before.

But this morning the government seems to be firming up its opposition to those claiming that what happened to Nowak was evidence of “two-tier justice”. Reform UK is the main party using this phrase, but some Tories have made the same argument. Yesterday, Keir Starmer said he did not accept that Britain has two-tier policing. This morning Lucy Rigby, the chief secretary to the Treasury, has been doing an interview round, and she told Sky News this allegation was a “slur” on the police. Asked about the claim, she said:

double quotation markFundamentally, I think that is a slur on the thousands of police officers that go out to work every day, putting themselves in harm’s way to serve the public, to try and prevent crime, and to keep us all safe.

The suggestion that we have twotier policing, which suggests at its heart that the police are on a sort of systemic basis pushing the interests of one group above another – I genuinely think is a slur on all those police officers that are serving this country day and night, seven days a week.

Here is our overnight story on the Nowak controversy, by Vikram Dodd, Peter Walker and Steven Morris.

Here is the agenda for the day.

9.30am: Emma Reynolds, the environment secretary, takes questions in the Commons.

9.30am: The Department for Education publishes annual figures on the number of pupils and staff in schools.

Morning: Keir Starmer is on a visit in North Yorkshire, before attending the mayoral council, a summit with mayors from England.

11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.

Lunchtime: Peter Kyle, the business secretary, is speaking at a lobby lunch.

2pm: John Swinney, the Scottish first minister, takes questions from MSPs.

Afternoon: Kemi Badenoch is on a visit in Warwickshire.

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If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use social media. You can reach me on Bluesky at @andrewsparrowgdn.bsky.social. The Guardian has given up posting from its official accounts on X, but individual Guardian journalists are there, I still have my account, and if you message me there at @AndrewSparrow, I will see it and respond if necessary.

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Key events

Starmer criticises Elon Musk for trying to ‘whip up division’ in UK in light of Nowak murder

Keir Starmer has criticised Elon Musk for trying to “whip up division” in the UK following the murder of Henry Nowak and the conclusion of the trial of his killer.

The PM spoke out after it was revealed that Musk has written more than 110 posts retweets and replies on X, the social media platform that he owns, about British politics since last Wednesday. That is far more than he has written about SpaceX, his company which is about to launch on the stock market.

Musk champions far-right politicians and parties on X, and most of his posts have been about the Nowak case, where he has strongly endorsed the view that the student was a victim of anti-white racism by the police. Although once close to Nigel Farage, Musk is now promoting Rupert Lowe’s Restore Britain party, which is even more extreme and anti-migrant than Reform UK.

Starmer normally avoids commenting on Musk, who has been fiercely critical of Starmer on X since early last year, when his tweets played a huge role in putting the grooming gangs scandal at the top of the political agenda.

But today, asked about Musk, Starmer said:

double quotation markWe need to also assert who we are as a country, because Musk, again, has been interfering in our politics in the last few days, trying to whip up division, that is not who we are in Britain.

In Britain, we are reasonable, tolerant people.

When we have a terrible case like Henry’s case, Henry Nowak, we react calmly as his family have done.

Today the Financial Times has published a report about Musk’s recent interventions. In their story, Amy Borrett, Rachel Rees and Joel Suss say:

double quotation markElon Musk’s interventions in UK politics have reignited over the past week, prompting concerns about the influence of the world’s richest man ahead of a byelection that could trigger a change in prime minister.

Musk has written more than 110 posts, retweets and replies about British politics since last Wednesday on his social media platform X, with a focus on the murder of student Henry Nowak.

UK politics accounted for more than one-third of his X activity over the past week, according to FT analysis – almost three times the share devoted to SpaceX, even as Musk sought a $1.8tn valuation in his satellite and AI company’s highly anticipated IPO on 12 June.

FT chart compariing Musk’s UK interventions on X compared to his SpaceX interventions Photograph: Financial Times

Starmer was speaking in a pooled TV interview, and he criticised Musk’s interventions in the Nowak scandal after being asked about the decision by the Labour MP Jess Asato to take legal action against Musk’s xAI company over its Grok tool being used to produce a fake sexualised pictures of her.

Starmer said he fully supported what Asato was doing. He said:

double quotation markJess Asato is absolutely right in the action that she is taking. Disgusting images were created in her particular case by Grok. And I’m really pleased that we took Grok on a few months ago, because that’s the fight we should be in.

Referring to Grok turning off its sexualised image generating function earlier this year, in response to pressure from the UK government and others, Starmer said:

double quotation markTaking on some of these platform providers, some of these disgusting images … we won that.

But Jess is right, she’s a parliamentarian, and I’m 100% behind the action that she has taken …

When it comes to disgusting images on Grok, we take Grok on and fight because that’s who we are as a country.



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