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Scottish independence: Lotto winners give further £2.5m to Yes | Scottish independence: Lotto winners give further £2.5m to Yes |
(about 1 hour later) | |
A couple who won £161m on the Euromillions lottery have given a further £2.5m to the Scottish independence campaign in the past year. | A couple who won £161m on the Euromillions lottery have given a further £2.5m to the Scottish independence campaign in the past year. |
Yes Scotland figures show Chris and Colin Weir each donated £1.25m, after a £1m donation the year before. | Yes Scotland figures show Chris and Colin Weir each donated £1.25m, after a £1m donation the year before. |
Overall, Yes Scotland said that it had received more than £3m in donations from April 2013 to May this year. | Overall, Yes Scotland said that it had received more than £3m in donations from April 2013 to May this year. |
In December last year, the Better Together campaign said it had received £1.6m in donations since April 2013. | In December last year, the Better Together campaign said it had received £1.6m in donations since April 2013. |
The pro-Union group indicated Yes Scotland was catching up with its own disclosure on donations, but said the figures showed the independence campaign relied on one "SNP source" for nearly 80% of its funding. | |
The independence referendum will be held on 18 September, with the official campaigning period getting under way on 30 May. | The independence referendum will be held on 18 September, with the official campaigning period getting under way on 30 May. |
The latest Yes Scotland figures outline more than 11,000 donors who each gave up to £7,500, totalling £473,000. | |
A further £2,678,000 has been given in larger donations from seven individual supporters, including the Weirs. | A further £2,678,000 has been given in larger donations from seven individual supporters, including the Weirs. |
Yes Scotland chief executive Blair Jenkins said: "We greatly appreciate and are hugely encouraged by the thousands of people across Scotland who have made donations - both large and small - according to their financial means." | |
Better Together campaign director Blair McDougall said no-one would criticise the Weirs, who are long standing SNP supporters. | |
But he added: "Whilst Better Together relies on the support of a broad mixture of large donors and thousands of ordinary people giving what they can, it is clear that the nationalists are almost completely dependent on one source of income." | |
The Better Together group figures from last year showed the biggest single donor was businessman Donald Houston, who gave £100,000 and a further £500,000 through two of his companies. | |
Earlier this month the Weirs explained their decision to donate funds to the pro-independence campaign. | |
In a letter published in some Scottish newspapers, the couple said: "We appreciate that not everyone shares our political view. | In a letter published in some Scottish newspapers, the couple said: "We appreciate that not everyone shares our political view. |
"That surely is the point of democracy. And, in a democracy, we each have the right to support political campaigns of our choosing and to contribute financially, provided we do so in line with the rules." | "That surely is the point of democracy. And, in a democracy, we each have the right to support political campaigns of our choosing and to contribute financially, provided we do so in line with the rules." |
Meanwhile, Canon Kenyon Wright, who chaired the Scottish Constitutional Convention on devolution, has declared his support for a Yes vote in a letter to the Sunday Herald newspaper. | |
Canon Wright said: "The Constitutional Convention shaped the Scottish Parliament, but it left important aspects of its aims unfinished." | |
He added: "In Scotland's affairs final power lies either with the people of Scotland or with the Parliament and Government in Westminster. It cannot lie with both." |
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