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Labour MP's Twitter retweet campaign nets £14k for Comic Relief

Howard Lake | 16 March 2013 | News

Labour MP Fiona Mactaggart has said she will donate £14,268 to Comic Relief after offering on Twitter to donate £1 for every retweet received in the next hour.

At 8.25pm she tweeted:

 

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At 9.01pm she tweeted:

Her campaign showed once again how some Twitter campaigns, especially those that don't cost Twitter users a penny, can take off quickly and effectively in terms of the sum unlocked for charity.

Criticism

Ms Mactaggart was criticised by some Twitter users who accused her of self-promotion and encouraged her to make the donation personally. Others questioned whether she would make the money, or indeed whether she could afford it, with others suggesting she might even try to claim it back via her parliamentary expenses.

 

 

 

 

Others retweeted her with the clear aim, perhaps politically motivated, of trying to make her pay as much as possible. Similar retweet campaigns for charities by companies have experienced such 'support'.

Mactaggart responded to some of these arguing that she was making a genuine offer, did have the cash, would not reclaim it on expenses, and was hoping to have some fun and "to remind twitter folk to give". She acknowledged that she was "twitter naive" but was committed to make the donation.

 

 

She summed up the result:

 

She continued today by urging people to give direct to Comic Relief:

 

 

Ms Mactaggart is the daughter of the later baronet Sir Ian Auld Mactaggart, who left her one fifth of his £6.5 million estate.

Before becoming MP for Slough in 1997 she worked for NCVO. In June 2003 she became a junior minister at the Home Office with responsibility for charities and the voluntary sector.

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