Analysis

Vote Leave spending casts doubt on referendum validity

by Luke Lythgoe | 05.10.2017
  • Tweet
  • Share
  • +1
  • LinkedIn 0
  • Email

During the EU referendum, Vote Leave made several “donations” – often into the hundreds of thousands of pounds – to smaller, pro-Brexit campaigners with a shared mission. Vote Leave chose not to register these as “referendum expenses”. Lawyers argue this was a breach of campaign spending rules, used by the official Leave campaign to overreach its £7 million spending cap.

The UK’s electoral watchdog has investigated and found no breach of referendum spending rules in at least one case. It is now facing legal action over that decision from the Good Law Project, which is challenging the Electoral Commission’s inaction over the controversial donations.

At the very least, the case exposes a gaping loophole in our democracy. At worst, the law was broken, and the “will of the people” bought by Brexit hardliners.

The litigation centres on payments of £625,000 made directly to Canadian digital consultancy firm AggregateIQ by Vote Leave, but declared as “referendum expenses” by Darren Grimes, then a young fashion student from County Durham with his own pro-Brexit social media campaign, BeLeave.

This was a clear tactic by Vote Leave to circumvent the referendum spending cap. Vote Leave campaign committee member Steve Baker, now a minister in the Brexit department, sent a round-robin email before the campaign suggesting Vote Leave might create separate legal entities, each of which could spend up to £700,000, thus allowing them to “spend as much money as is necessary to win”. Vote Leave’s finance director, Antonia Flockton, told a parliamentary committee after the referendum “when it became obvious that we were in surplus funding, we chose to donate to other campaigns”.

A freedom of information response last month revealed the Electoral Commission found “no reasonable grounds to suspect that any breaches” of the spending rules had occurred.

The watchdog has defended its decision in an email to InFacts, citing the EU Referendum Act (see 22), arguing a “common plan or arrangement” between Vote Leave and BeLeave had to be in place for joint spending rules to apply, and that it was fine for separate campaign groups to “liaise and discuss campaigning approaches”. What’s more, Vote Leave’s payment directly to AggregateIQ on behalf of BeLeave was also “acceptable under the law”.

The Good Law Project say this misses the point. The main issue is not whether the two groups had a “common plan”, and therefore whether the donations count as joint spending and should have been registered by Vote Leave (although it seems clear they were working together). Rather the Good Law Project argues that these payments are not donations at all, but straightforward referendum spending by Vote Leave. To deny this is to undermine the purpose of the law, which is in place to stop wealthy campaigners spending potentially unlimited sums of money by, for example, buying services for others who are known to be campaigning for the same result.

The Electoral Commission told InFacts it had no further comment to make on this point.

The Good Law Project is also demanding answers from the Electoral Commission. In particular, have there been other investigations into similar arrangements with other groups? Vote Leave are known to have also given £100,000 to Veterans For Britain for AggregateIQ’s services.

If the case is successful, the Electoral Commission’s decision to accept the Leave campaign’s spending will be quashed. It will then have to reopen its investigation into Vote Leave and maybe prosecute it. Ultimately the validity of the referendum could be brought into question.

Pro-Europeans in Parliament and across civil society must make a noise about this, and demand those responsible brought to account. Otherwise Britain might have been dragged out of Europe on the basis of a potentially illegal campaign.

You can make a contribution to the Good Law Project’s work on this case via their Crowd Justice page.

Want more InFacts?

Click here to get the newsletter

    Your first name (required)

    Your last name (required)

    Your email (required)

    Choose which newsletters you want to subscribe to (required)
    Daily InFacts NewsletterWeekly InFacts NewsletterBoth the daily and the weekly Newsletter

    By clicking 'Sign up to InFacts' I consent to InFacts's privacy policy and being contacted by InFacts. You can unsubscribe at any time by emailing [email protected]

    A previous version of this article described Darren Grimes’ social media campaign as “anti-Brexit”. This has been corrected to “pro-Brexit”.

    • Tweet
    • Share
    • +1
    • LinkedIn 0
    • Email

    Edited by Hugo Dixon

    Tags: Antonia Flockton, , , , , expenses, Good Law Project, Steve Baker, Categories: UK Politics

    8 Responses to “Vote Leave spending casts doubt on referendum validity”

    • What about all the lies peddled as fact? Does that not invalidate the result too? A referendum based on lies and deceit is void.

      • All the while the Electoral Commission (EC) maintains that no electoral law has been broken, but the police won’t get involved. The EC is more likely to prop up the establishment than not.

    • Is this paragrapgh correct whwn it refers to an ANTI BREXIT SOCIAL MEDIA CAMPAIGN. The litigation centres on payments of £625,000 made directly to Canadian digital consultancy firm AggregateIQ by Vote Leave, but declared as “referendum expenses” by Darren Grimes, then a young fashion student from County Durham with his own anti-Brexit social media campaign, BeLeave.

    • I’m very concerned by the Electoral Commission’s response to this. I may be wrong, but it looks as though no-one dares rock the boat where the referendum result is concerned. Stitch up, or at least whitewash, come to mind. What is every body so afraid of?

      • Just another example of anti-democracy at work. I believe that the majority of the Tory party engineered Brexit for their own ends. Too much smoke and mirrors with this government – why would Cameron have announced that the referendum would be taken into account when it was not legally binding, and he ‘supposedly’ though Remain would win?

        I think the referendum was an excuse to appease the extreme right wing Tory hard liners, hence Cameron’s wet lettuce of a deal before the referendum. We’ve been sold down the river on this without any doubt.

    • The Management of the referendum result is something that should have been questioned.The Right hijacked the result from day one and were given a free pass although the referendum was supposed to be advisory.Even the President’s British friend Farage has agreed that technically the result was advisory only.

    • One can construct a Venn Diagram for both the election of Trump and Brexit and see an increasing amount of overlap. Firms like AggregateIQ (linked to Trump backer Robert Mercer) and characters like Darren Grimes are slap bang in the middle.

      Considering his social media campaigns were flops, I rather think Mr Grimes should be made to produce receipts for the £675k he received as ‘donations’. The word dodgy springs to mind.