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General election 2019: Labour tops donation list for second campaign week | General election 2019: Labour tops donation list for second campaign week |
(32 minutes later) | |
Labour has knocked the Conservatives off the top spot when it comes to large donations - receiving almost £3.5m in the second week of campaigning. | Labour has knocked the Conservatives off the top spot when it comes to large donations - receiving almost £3.5m in the second week of campaigning. |
The figures from the Electoral Commission show the Tories raised the most in week one, collecting £5.7m - 87% of all donations more than £7,500. | The figures from the Electoral Commission show the Tories raised the most in week one, collecting £5.7m - 87% of all donations more than £7,500. |
But the latest stats put them second to Labour, having taken just under £3m in week two - 13 to 19 November. | But the latest stats put them second to Labour, having taken just under £3m in week two - 13 to 19 November. |
The Brexit Party coffers also saw a surge, collecting £2.25m over the week. | The Brexit Party coffers also saw a surge, collecting £2.25m over the week. |
The top donor over the period was the Unite union, which gave £3m to Labour, followed by businessman Christopher Harborne, who donated £2m to the Brexit Party. | The top donor over the period was the Unite union, which gave £3m to Labour, followed by businessman Christopher Harborne, who donated £2m to the Brexit Party. |
The Conservatives have still raised the most over the two weeks they have been reporting to the Commission - more than £8.6m, compared with Labour's £3.7m and the Brexit Party's £2.5m. | The Conservatives have still raised the most over the two weeks they have been reporting to the Commission - more than £8.6m, compared with Labour's £3.7m and the Brexit Party's £2.5m. |
All registered political parties must submit four weekly reports to the Electoral Commission in the run-up to a general election to show any sums they receive over £7,500. | All registered political parties must submit four weekly reports to the Electoral Commission in the run-up to a general election to show any sums they receive over £7,500. |
The figures for week two are: | The figures for week two are: |
The numbers published do not include any smaller donations that may have been made to the parties. | The numbers published do not include any smaller donations that may have been made to the parties. |
But the total in large donations for all the parties on the second week was over £9m - more than three times the £2.5m raised in the same election period in 2017. | But the total in large donations for all the parties on the second week was over £9m - more than three times the £2.5m raised in the same election period in 2017. |
In the first week of the campaign, the gap in donations between the Conservatives and everyone else was vast. | |
The Tories attracted 26 times as much in donations over £7,500 as Labour. | |
And they brought in a lot more money from smaller donors. | |
Labour topping the donations league in the second week of the campaign doesn't eliminate the gap, but it does close it. | |
The biggest contributor to Labour's pot - by a mile - was the trade union Unite. | |
The Conservatives attracted some biggish individual donations - the hedge fund manager Jonathan Wood gave £250,000. | |
But it was the Brexit Party that received the biggest donation from an individual - Christopher Harborne, who owns an aviation fuel agency, gave them £2m. |