Reform MP loses whip after business Covid loan claims

Jack Fenwick
Political correspondent
Cachella Smith
BBC News
PA Media A headshot of James McMurdockPA Media

Reform UK MP James McMurdock has given up the party whip after a newspaper raised questions over tens of thousands of pounds worth of loans he took out under a Covid-19 support scheme.

The MP for South Basildon and East Thurrock has denied any wrongdoing, saying all his business dealings prior to entering Parliament were compliant with regulations, but said he asked to have the whip suspended as a "precautionary measure".

The claims published by the Sunday Times relate to loans McMurdock took out amounting to £70,000 via two companies, and whether the firms were eligible.

Reform said it will carry out its own internal investigation and that McMurdock had agreed to "cooperate in full".

Prior to the Sunday Times story being published, the party's chief whip Lee Anderson said McMurdock had informed him he had "removed the party whip from himself pending the outcome of an investigation".

The paper alleged that McMurdock borrowed tens of thousands of pounds under the government's Bounce Back loans scheme, which was designed to help struggling businesses during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The newspaper said the loans were worth a total of £70,000 and were applied for through two companies - JAM Financial Limited and Gym Live Health and Fitness Limited.

Company records show JAM Financial Limited had one employee and less than £5,000 in assets before the pandemic, and that Gym Live Health and Fitness Limited was dormant until January 31, 2020.

The Sunday Times claimed JAM Financial Limited took out the maximum loan of £50,000, a level of loan that required a turnover of at least £200,000.

Gym Live Health and Fitness Limited is alleged to have taken out loans worth £20,000, which would have required a turnover of £80,000.

In statement, McMurdock said his business dealings had been assessed by "appropriately qualified professionals" and "absolute compliance was confirmed".

He continued: "As a precautionary measure, and for the protection of Reform UK, I have asked to have the whip suspended temporarily."

PA Media Nigel Farage and James McMurdock drinking a pint in a pubPA Media

BBC News understands Reform's internal investigation is likely to be led by someone from outside the party and will take at least a few weeks.

McMurdock won his seat last July by just 98 votes. He will now sit as independent.

A since-deleted profile published on Reform's website quoted McMurdock as saying he worked in business prior to standing for the party, including at the banks Goldman Sachs and Lehman Brothers.

He is the second of the five Reform MPs elected in 2024 who have since lost the party whip, after Rupert Lowe was suspended in March.

That came after the party alleged the Great Yarmouth MP had made "threats of physical violence" against then-chairman Zia Yusuf.

The Crown Prosecution Service later said Lowe would not face criminal charges over the claims, which he called "false" and a "brutal smear campaign". He now sits in the Commons as an independent.

Reform's Sarah Pochin won the Runcorn by-election in May, taking the party's Commons cohort back to five.

However, McMurdock giving up the party whip means Reform now has four sitting MPs.