The Guardian broke the Delo story on 18 March with full investigative treatment. Delo, a US-convicted crypto billionaire pardoned by Trump, bankrolled a Westminster hub hosting Restore Britain and Reform UK contacts. The piece detailed his £100m philanthropic claims, his money laundering conviction, and support for 50-plus organisations. It quoted Konstantin Kisin's Triggernometry podcast at the Sanctuary: "He's a brown Hindu, how is he English?" about Rishi Sunak. That inflammatory bit justified the exposé framing.
What the Guardian skipped: Lowe launched his deportation campaign from that venue the same day. No outlet asked what mass deportation means in practice. No one examined the legal basis. No one connected Delo's funding to the platform. The story became about Delo's dodgy network, not Lowe's politics.
The BBC noted Restore lacks Electoral Commission recognition in mid-March, a critical regulatory gap. No follow-up on whether Lowe can legally field candidates in May 2026. Two North Northamptonshire councillors defected to Restore in March. One rejoined Reform within days. Coverage framed this as Reform instability. The competitive threat got buried.
Express ran 10 articles mentioning Restore in recent weeks, mostly dismissive asides. The Sun, Mail, and Telegraph combined for eight pieces. None treated Lowe as a serious actor. GB News ran three articles, all negative. Compare that to Farage's YouGov dispute, which generated 50-plus pieces across outlets. Or his Cameo earnings exposé, which dominated 16 publications on 17 March. Lowe's crowdfunding haul and Elon Musk's endorsement got referenced in passing, never analysed.
The Guardian called the Sanctuary a secretive hub connecting fringe and mainstream rightwing figures. Triggernometry's 1.7 million subscribers give inflammatory rhetoric a massive platform. Delo claims he doesn't endorse the ideology he funds. But housing both Restore and Reform operations proves otherwise. The implication: crypto money is poisoning British politics through unregulated channels.
Yet Lowe himself doesn't merit serious treatment. No outlet pressed for clarity on Restore's registration status. The defections story became about Reform's chaos, not Lowe's recruitment. When Reform claimed £700m in council savings on 16 March, outlets scrutinised the figures. When Lowe launched mass deportation proposals, silence.
Most negative coverage on Restore relies on framing, not attributed claims. The Guardian described the Sanctuary's network without asking Lowe to defend the associations. The BBC noted the Electoral Commission problem without demanding a response. This isn't journalism. It's dismissal by omission.
Contrast that with Farage. The Guardian analysed 4,366 Cameo videos earning him £374,893 since 2021, exposing endorsements of neo-Nazi events and riot convicts. That's legitimate investigative work. But his energy policy pledge got multi-outlet dissection on 17 March. His YouGov complaints forced methodological transparency. His regret over Worcestershire's council tax rise became a governance failure narrative. Every Farage move gets treated as serious. Every Lowe move gets ignored.
The editorial choice is stark. Farage is the threat. Lowe is the curiosity. That judgment worked when Restore had zero councillors. Now they've got 15, all poached from Reform in five weeks. The press has decided Farage is the one with conviction politics. Which means they're not watching Lowe closely enough to know if they're wrong.