Firstly, there is a difference between "Brand" and "company" or "business name". There is also a difference between "Brand" and "Model".
From 1969 the Mini was always sold, in the UK, under its own brand name, even though the company that owned the brand was Leyland, and later Rover, then BMW.
Mini was not a specific model. The models under the Mini brand (in the UK in 1969) were 850, 1000, Cooper S, Clubman and 1275GT.
The original Mini brand badges were a blue and white shield with the word Mini across the top (sorry, I haven’t got a pic of that one at the moment – can anyone else put one up here?).
By the time the company had been through a few changes and owners, emerging as the Rover Group, the Mini brand badge was a circle with the word Mini in the centre, with wings either side.
When the Cooper was re-launched, this badge was replaced with one which said Mini Cooper inside a wreath, but only on the Cooper – non-Coopers retained the winged Mini badge.
When BMW launched the new MINI (and they have always insisted it be written in capital letters) the badge was a re-worked and stylised version of the previous Rover version, with Mini in a central circle and wings either side.
Any statement by BMW that Mini had never been a brand in its own right is simply not accurate, but PR people in companies are often mistaken in some of the things they say, especially if they haven’t done their home work.
Certainly, it was under BMW that MINI was made a separate company, but remained as part of the BMW Group of companies – though it seems there is very little autonomy within MINI. That is, BMW still definitely pulls the strings.
So, I have to disagree with you on this one.
Cheers,
Watto.