Billionaire JCB chair shifts support toward Reform UK with dual six-figure donations amid small-business campaign
Lord Anthony Bamford, longtime donor to the Conservative Party, has redirected part of his support by authorising his company JCB to donate £200,000 to Reform UK, led by
Nigel Farage, while matching the same amount to Conservative Party.
The move marks a notable development in British party funding ahead of the next general election.
JCB, the global construction-equipment manufacturer based in Staffordshire, employs 19,000 people and recorded turnover of £5.8 billion in 2024. It stated that its donations were guided by support for parties that “believe in small business”, reflecting its reliance on an ecosystem of more than 800 UK suppliers, most of them small and medium-sized enterprises.
Bamford’s shift follows long-standing ties with the Conservatives: his private and corporate contributions to the party and Brexit-aligned campaigns exceed £10 million.
The donation to Reform UK thereby signals his willingness to hedge his political backing, and underscores Reform’s growing appeal to business donors and entrepreneurs as it targets the SME sector.
Farage welcomed the contribution, asserting that many small business owners felt the Conservatives had abandoned them after Brexit.
He described the donation as an endorsement of Reform’s “pro-entrepreneurship, pro-startup, pro-small business” credentials.
Meanwhile, next-generation donors and business leaders attending Reform’s Westminster press conference echoed that message, framing small businesses as undervalued under current regulation.
The donation arrives amid shifting dynamics on the right of British politics, with Reform UK leading in several opinion polls and the Conservatives under pressure to retain both parliamentary and funding dominance.
As one analyst observed, the dual donation allows Bamford to keep influence across both parties and reflects a broader trend of business interests diversifying their political affiliations.
JCB’s statement emphasised its independent status as a family-owned British firm and said that supporting parties with small-business platforms reflected its core values.
While the full implications of the contribution will play out in the election cycle, the move already reinforces Reform UK’s narrative of representing business-backed change and positions the Conservatives as vulnerable to donor realignment.