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A Tory MP appears to have endorsed Reform’s Lee Anderson, after his former colleague promised not to campaign against him.

Mr Anderson – who jumped ship after losing the Tory whip in February – posted on Facebook that he would not campaign with his new party at the next election in four seats won by the Conservatives in 2019, as the MPs in place would “always be my friends”.

One of them, Doncaster’s Nick Fletcher, then responded in a post on X, saying the Ashfield MP had been his constituency’s “greatest champion”, and he hoped voters “appreciate what he has done for his home town and his country at the next election”.

He added that “we both need to be back in Westminster” after the national ballot, expected later this year, along with the three other MPs cited by Mr Anderson – Mansfield MP Ben Bradley, Dudley North MP Marco Longhi and Bassetlaw MP Brendan Clarke-Smith.

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Mr Fletcher is now facing questions over his remarks – especially as the Conservatives will stand their own candidate in Mr Anderson’s seat.

The Tories‘ code of conduct says: “No member of the Conservative Party is allowed to oppose a Conservative Party candidate in any election.

“Also, they are not allowed to act as the agent of such a person. To do either is to commit a serious disciplinary offence.”

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After being spoken to by the chief whip, the MP later tweeted: “For the avoidance of any doubt, of course I want to see a Conservative majority government returned at the next election, with as many Conservative MPs as possible.

“Lee is a personal friend but we can’t risk the damage a Labour government would do to our country. Just look at what the Labour council has done to Doncaster.”

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Deputy leader of the Liberal Democrats Daisy Cooper said voters were “sick to the back teeth of this never-ending circus of in-fighting”, and Mr Fletcher should have the whip withdrawn.

“It seems even Conservative MPs don’t want the Conservatives to win,” she added. “Rishi Sunak needs to find his backbone and kick Nick Fletcher out of the Conservative Party.

“Failure to do so would show yet again that he’s too weak to control his party let alone govern the country.”

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Lee Anderson – Reform’s only MP – tells Sky News his new party will be ‘a major force’ in the next election

A spokesperson for Reform revealed Mr Anderson had “made it clear” since he joined the party that he would “not personally campaign against a handful of his close friends”.

They added: “The party respect this decision and it shows Lee’s loyalty to his friends, which goes beyond politics.”

But they insisted Reform would still be standing candidates in the four seats, and planned to “punish” the Conservatives at the next election.

A Conservative Party spokesman said: “Nick has made clear he wants to see as many Conservatives as possible elected. A vote for Reform is a vote to let Keir Starmer into Number 10.”

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US SEC’s Crenshaw takes aim at crypto in final weeks at the agency

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US SEC's Crenshaw takes aim at crypto in final weeks at the agency

SEC Commissioner Caroline Crenshaw, expected to leave the agency in less than a month, used one of her final public speaking engagements to address the regulator’s response to digital assets.

Speaking at a Brookings Institution event on Thursday, Crenshaw said standards at the SEC had “eroded” in the last year, with “markets [starting] to look like casinos,” and “chaos” as the agency dismissed many years-long enforcement cases, reduced civil penalties and filed fewer actions overall.

The commissioner, expected to depart in January after her term officially ended in June 2024, also criticized many crypto users and the agency’s response to the markets.

Cryptocurrencies, Politics, SEC, Policies, Enforcement
SEC Commissioner Caroline Crenshaw speaking at a Brookings Institution event on Thursday. Source: Brookings

“People invest in crypto because they see some others getting rich overnight,” said Crenshaw. “Less visible are the more common stories of people losing their shirts. One thing that consistently puzzles me about crypto is what are cryptocurrency prices based on? Many, but not all, crypto purchasers are not trading based on economic fundamentals.”

She added:

“I think it’s safe to say [crypto purchasers are] speculating, reacting to hysteria from promoters, feeding a desire to gamble, wash trading to push up prices, or, as one Nobel laureate has posited, ‘betting on the popularity of the politicians who support or stand to benefit from the success of crypto.’” 

In contrast to Crenshaw’s remarks, SEC Chair Paul Atkins, Commissioner Hester Peirce and Commissioner Mark Uyeda have all publicly expressed their support for the agency’s approach to digital assets and the Trump administration’s direction of policy.

Peirce and Atkins spoke at a Blockchain Association Policy Summit this week to discuss crypto regulation and a path forward on market structure under consideration in the Senate.

Related: Crypto industry fears ‘vehemently anti crypto’ Caroline Crenshaw SEC vote

During the Thursday event’s question-and-answer session, Crenshaw expanded on her views of crypto, stating that it was a “tiny piece of the market,” and suggested that the SEC focus on other regulatory concerns. In addition, she expressed concern that the agency was heading toward giving crypto companies an exception from policies that applied to traditional finance.

“I do worry that as the crypto rules are perhaps implemented, or perhaps we just put out more guidance […] where we say they are not securities, where we loosen the basic fundamentals of the securities laws so that they can operate in our system, but without any of the guardrails that we have in place. I do worry that that can lead to more significant market contagion,” said Crenshaw.

The final throes of bipartisan financial regulators under Trump?

The departure of Crenshaw would leave the SEC with three Republican commissioners, two of whom were nominated by US President Donald Trump. As of Thursday, Trump had not made any announcements signaling that he ever planned to nominate another Democrat to the SEC, and Crenshaw said the agency’s staff had been reduced by about 20% in the last year.