Democrat Sara Gideon, the establishment-backed challenger to Maine’s Republican Sen. Susan Collins in 2020, reeled in significantly more from in-state donors in less than two weeks than Collins has since January.

Maine’s House speaker, who formally announced her bid to unseat Collins on June 24, raised nearly $1.1 million in the final 10 days of the second quarter (April through June), recently released Federal Election Commission filings show.

Of the total haul, 43% ― about $456,000 ― came from people who gave $200 or less. Campaigns are not required to disclose the identity of many of these donors to the FEC, so it’s nearly impossible to know for sure exactly how many of these contributions came from within Maine.

But Maine donors accounted for more than 44% of the remaining $598,000 ― roughly $265,000.

Collins, by comparison, raised $2 million during that same time period ― the most she’s ever raised in a quarter ― mostly through out-of-state donations.

Roughly $26,000, or a mere 1.3% of her total haul, came from people who gave $200 or less. A whopping 95% of Collins’ remaining contributions came from out-of-state donors, with only about $98,000 given from people in Maine.

In the first quarter, between January and March, Collins raised roughly $9,000 in in-state contributions, totaling about 1% of that quarter’s haul. In the 10 days since receiving her first Senate campaign contribution, Gideon raised more than double the amount of in-state donations than the Republican incumbent did in six months.

“Person by person, more than 2,000 Mainers came together to support our campaign in the past seven days,” Gideon said in a video posted to her campaign’s Twitter account on July 2. “We raised a record over $1 million in just seven days, showing people around this state that we have the momentum and we have what it takes together to defeat Susan Collins in 2020.”