Tether Whale Dumps £12 Million, Backing Crypto’s ‘British Trump’

Bitsfull2026/03/24 15:1218121

Summary:

Tether Whale Dumps £12 Million, Backing Crypto’s ‘British Trump’


Yesterday, the UK's Financial Times reported that the UK Labour government is set to announce a new rule: companies donating to UK political parties will now have to disclose the true individual behind the donation.


This new rule comes in the wake of a series of scandals involving foreign funds seeping into UK politics. But when discussing foreign funds, one cannot help but take note of a "hidden" crypto billionaire who has been sponsoring the 'UK Trump' through dual nationality.


According to the latest quarterly political donation data released by the UK Electoral Commission on March 5, 2026. Reform UK once again topped the UK's quarterly fundraising list with £5.5 million, but £3 million of that donation came from the same person, with the source listed as Thailand.



The donor's name is Christopher Harborne. Sometimes, he goes by Chakrit Sakunkrit.


Based in Thailand and holding Thai nationality, he holds about 12% of the parent company of the world's largest stablecoin Tether by dual nationality, operates one of the world's largest private aviation fuel networks, and has been channeling political funding to a far-right UK party thousands of miles away. Over the past two years, he has used this wealth to bet on one thing: pushing Farage and Reform UK into a position of power in UK politics.



Cambridge Engineer & Bangkok Recluse


In December 1962, Christopher Charles Sherriff Harborne was born in England. He was educated at Westminster School, whose alumni include British prime ministers, judges, and bankers, representing the upper echelons of the imperial elite.


He then attended Downing College, Cambridge University, where he pursued a dual degree in Engineering and Management. This was followed by an MBA from INSEAD in Fontainebleau, France, graduating in 1988.


His first job was as a management consultant at McKinsey, where he stayed for five years. In those days, McKinsey consultants often ended up in investment banks or senior positions at multinational corporations. But not Harborne. He went to Asia, worked for a research firm, and then founded Sherriff Global Group in 2000, a bulk commodity trading company focusing on early-stage high-risk offshore services, named after his paternal family surname.


Around 2005, he moved his family to Thailand. That same year, he registered AML Global Ltd., an aviation fuel brokerage company, there. Today, AML Global has over 1200 supply points worldwide and is one of the largest private jet fuel brokers globally.


In 2011, he officially became a Thai citizen, taking the name Chakrit Sakunkrit. A British citizenship certificate and a Thai national ID coexisted in the same person's pocket from then on.


No one knows about his family situation. No spouse, no children, no verifiable personal records. He never gives media interviews, rarely appears in public, and has no social media accounts. In an attention economy that thrives on exposure, he uses thorough invisibility as a talisman.


Cryptocurrency Field Positioning


In 2011, when Bitcoin was still a secret code within a geek community, Harborne bought in. In 2014, he bought Ethereum, earlier than the vast majority of institutional investors.


But what truly changed his status in the crypto world was a hack in August 2016.


That summer, the Bitfinex exchange was attacked, losing around $72 million worth of Bitcoin—equivalent to nearly $7 billion at today's prices. Bitfinex couldn't immediately fully reimburse users, so they took a controversial step at the time: issuing a token called BFX to all affected users, representing a claim on the exchange, with a promise of future redemption.


Most users chose to sell, panic-selling at a discount, eager to exit.


Harborne chose to buy, and kept buying, eventually amassing around 12% of Bitfinex and Tether's parent company DigFinex under the name Chakrit Sakunkrit.


This is no small wager. Tether, under DigFinex, today the issuer of the world's largest stablecoin USDT, has long held a top position in global cryptocurrency trading volume, with a market capitalization exceeding 140 billion US dollars. Holding a 12% stake in DigFinex means that Harborne stands at the core of the global crypto-dollar system.


But this stake has also brought him trouble. In March 2023, The Wall Street Journal published an investigative report on Tether and Bitfinex's banking arrangements, linking Harborne and his aviation fuel company AML Global to the path Tether/Bitfinex took to access the U.S. banking system, implying that he intentionally concealed his identity when opening an account at Signature Bank under the Thai name Chakrit Sakunkrit.


Harborne promptly filed a lawsuit, accusing The Wall Street Journal of publishing false allegations of "fraud, money laundering, and terrorism financing," and officially filed the lawsuit in February 2024 at the Delaware Superior Court.


The Wall Street Journal subsequently deleted paragraphs in the report involving Harborne and AML Global, stating in an editor's note: "The deletion of this paragraph is to avoid any possible implication... that Harborne or AML engaged in any concealment or falsification of information during the account opening process."


The lawsuit was allowed to proceed.


The Biggest Variable in UK Politics


Beyond aviation fuel and crypto equity, Harborne has a third identity: one of the biggest individual political donors in UK history.


His political trajectory follows a traceable right-wing betting path. In his early years, he donated to the Conservative Party and also contributed £1 million to support Boris Johnson's election campaign. However, in 2019, as Brexit negotiations repeatedly stalled in a Conservative-dominated parliament, he believed that the Conservative Party lacked the determination to advance Brexit. He then diverted £6 million to Farage's Brexit Party, becoming the party's biggest donor that year. The Brexit Party subsequently won big in the European Parliament elections.


In September 2023, he accompanied Johnson to Ukraine as a "Boris Johnson Office Advisor" to participate in the Yalta European Strategy conference, reportedly meeting with senior Ukrainian officials and President Zelensky. This position has never been publicly explained.


In 2024, the Conservative Party suffered a devastating defeat in the general election, and the Labour Party came to power. Both major parties have lost their utility: Labour has a clear skeptical stance on cryptocurrency, with Labour MP Rushanara Ali publicly calling for a ban on political parties accepting cryptocurrency donations, calling it "a potential channel for foreign interference in democracy"; the Conservative Party has long been slow to act on crypto regulation, always remaining at the rhetorical level.


The Farage Reform Party is the only option. Farage is also often referred to as the British version of Trump.


In the third quarter of 2025, £9 million. The largest-ever in-life donation to a single party in British political history, setting a new record. In the fourth quarter, another £3 million. Throughout 2025, his total donations to the Reform Party exceeded £12 million.



An Investment with Expected Returns


Harborne rarely publicly discusses his donation motives, with a rare exception when he briefly stated, "The UK has not fully capitalized on Brexit, and we have not kept pace with the 21st-century technological field."


But it's hard for outsiders to ignore another clearer line of logic: he holds approximately 12% equity in the parent company of the world's largest stablecoin, Tether. If the UK becomes a crypto-friendly regulatory environment, it directly benefits his core assets. Political donations, in a sense, are also an investment—just that the target is policy, not tokens.


The timeline makes this judgment harder to overlook. The Reform Party openly embraced cryptocurrency only after receiving Harborne's substantial donation. Farage announced that if the Reform Party came to power, they would introduce the "Crypto Assets and Digital Finance Bill," promising to reduce crypto capital gains tax, allow tax payments in cryptocurrency, and establish a national Bitcoin reserve.


In June 2025, the Reform Party became the first major party in the UK to formally accept cryptocurrency political donations. Farage himself then personally contributed £215,000 to purchase about 6.3% of the shares in the UK Bitcoin treasury company Stack BTC.


The Reform Party denies any direct connection between the two. The Liberal Democrats and Labour Party are calling for an investigation.


The Hidden Logic


In the US, the crypto industry poured money to support Trump, reclaiming regulatory dominance. In the UK, the same script is playing out with a different lead, but the money is still flowing.


The impact of this bet is already partly visible. The Reform Party fundraised £18.6 million throughout 2025, surpassing the Conservative Party's £13.4 million and the Labour Party's £8.2 million, becoming the highest fundraising party in the UK. Farage's approval ratings continue to rise, and the Reform Party ranks first in multiple polls.


If this trajectory continues, a crypto-friendly party will have the opportunity to take over the UK government, and those who bet early will benefit the most.


The U.S. story has already provided a reference: In 2024, the crypto industry pumped over $200 million into congressional candidates. After Trump's victory, the SEC saw a change in leadership, leading to a sharp turn in crypto regulation direction and bringing a long-awaited policy windfall to the industry.


The UK story is still unfolding.


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