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Ex-Tory donor Arron Banks gives £1m to UKIP | Ex-Tory donor Arron Banks gives £1m to UKIP |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Former Conservative supporter Arron Banks is donating £1m to UKIP. | Former Conservative supporter Arron Banks is donating £1m to UKIP. |
He said he had been intending to give £100,000, but had raised that to £1m after William Hague downplayed his past significance to the Tories. | |
The former foreign secretary said he had never heard of Mr Banks, who previously gave £25,000 to his party. | |
UKIP leader Nigel Farage said he was "delighted" by the donation, which he said would go to support the party's general election campaign. | |
The move follows the defections of two Tory MPs - Mark Reckless and Douglas Carswell. | |
Mr Banks told journalists he had been a Conservative "all his life" but believed the UK would be better off outside the EU, which he described as a "closed shop for bankrupt countries". | |
Analysis by political correspondent Ross Hawkins | Analysis by political correspondent Ross Hawkins |
The ruder their opponents get, the more UKIP like it. Arron Banks says he gave 10 times as much as planned to the party because William Hague suggested he was a nobody. | The ruder their opponents get, the more UKIP like it. Arron Banks says he gave 10 times as much as planned to the party because William Hague suggested he was a nobody. |
That suits a party that thrives on playing the outsider. So will the money, of course. | That suits a party that thrives on playing the outsider. So will the money, of course. |
Fighting a series of by-elections a few months before a general election won't come cheap. But expectations about the latest announcement were very high. | |
A man whose name meant nothing to Mr Hague - and many others - before today donating to UKIP won't worry Conservatives nearly as much as defecting MPs. | A man whose name meant nothing to Mr Hague - and many others - before today donating to UKIP won't worry Conservatives nearly as much as defecting MPs. |
And it won't come close to overshadowing the tax cuts announced in the prime minister's conference speech. | And it won't come close to overshadowing the tax cuts announced in the prime minister's conference speech. |
The businessman, who co-founded the Brightside insurance firm and now runs the Go Skippy business, said he had been upset by Mr Hague's comments after his defection was revealed. | |
"I woke up this morning intending to donate £100,000 to UKIP and I understand Mr Hague called me a nobody. | |
"So, in light of that and because I am a strong advocate of leaving the European Union, I have decided today to donate £1m to the party and not the £100,000 we originally agreed." | |
Suggesting he would rethink his allegiance if the Tories reconsidered their position on Europe, he added: "They (the Conservatives) win when they are conviction politicians. They do not win when they are as they are now". | |
Mr Banks said he was "absolutely convinced" that other business people would seek to "bankroll" UKIP in the run-up to next year's general election. | Mr Banks said he was "absolutely convinced" that other business people would seek to "bankroll" UKIP in the run-up to next year's general election. |
Mr Farage said his new recruit had "bitten back" in the face of Conservative barbs. | Mr Farage said his new recruit had "bitten back" in the face of Conservative barbs. |
He said the party needed money as it did not have access to funding from the trade unions, or the financial support available to opposition parties in the House of Commons. | |
Reacting to Mr Banks' switch earlier on the final day of the Conservative conference in Birmingham, Mr Hague had said: "The conference has fully moved on from the defection of one MP on Saturday and the gentleman you're talking about is not a senior figure in this party, not someone I know at all." | |
UKIP's finances | |
According to its latest statement of accounts, UKIP's income in 2013 was £2,479,314, of which donations accounted for £1.373,031. | |
This was double the total amount it received in the previous year - £1,227,802 - and the party's income now stands at the highest it has ever been. | |
Nigel Farage's party raised £1.4m from April to June this year - £170,000 more than the Lib Dems. It also topped the list of highest gifts to any single party, after receiving just over £1m from Paul Sykes, a former Tory donor, over the same period. | |
UKIP and the Conservatives are at odds over how much Mr Banks has given to the Tories. | |
A spokesman for Mr Farage said Mr Banks funded the Chipping Sodbury office of the South Gloucestershire Conservatives "to the tune of £250,000". | |
But the Conservative Party agent in Chipping Sodbury, Sonia Williams, said the support given by Mr Banks was "nothing like the order of magnitude" of the sums claimed by UKIP. | But the Conservative Party agent in Chipping Sodbury, Sonia Williams, said the support given by Mr Banks was "nothing like the order of magnitude" of the sums claimed by UKIP. |
Donations | Donations |
She estimated the total support given by Mr Banks was "probably around the £22,000 mark". | |
The Conservatives say Mr Banks donated a total of £25,000, split between two Conservative branches, and loaned £75,000 to one branch in 2007. They said he had not made any donations since 2009. | |
These figures were confirmed by the Electoral Commission, which said the two recorded donations were of £20,000 in 2007 and £5,000 in 2009. | These figures were confirmed by the Electoral Commission, which said the two recorded donations were of £20,000 in 2007 and £5,000 in 2009. |
It said the £75,000 loan had been made by a company called Panacea Finance, part of the Brightside insurance group co-founded by Mr Banks. | It said the £75,000 loan had been made by a company called Panacea Finance, part of the Brightside insurance group co-founded by Mr Banks. |
BBC political editor Nick Robinson said there would be relief that the latest Conservative to switch to UKIP was "not a big figure", but added: "Having said that, it is the theme of this conference underlying the surface, which is 'could they stop the Tories winning?'" | BBC political editor Nick Robinson said there would be relief that the latest Conservative to switch to UKIP was "not a big figure", but added: "Having said that, it is the theme of this conference underlying the surface, which is 'could they stop the Tories winning?'" |
The Conservatives say that electing them at next May's general election is the only way for people to ensure there is a referendum on UK membership of the European Union. |