‘Russian collusion’: Farage mocks ‘cancel Brexit’ petition with signatures from Russia
Former UKIP leader Nigel Farage has reacted to a tweet making fun of the fact some Russians have signed a petition calling for Brexit to be stopped, suggesting that an investigation should be launched into “Russian collusion.”
Hugh Bennett, news editor at right-wing blog Guido Fawkes, took to social media on Thursday night after the ‘Revoke Article 50’ petition had passed the 1 million signatures barrier.
READ MORE: ‘I will take over as Brexit Party leader’: Nigel Farage back on the frontline
Bennett attached a data image from the petitions website, revealing that 12 Russians had signed up and cheekily asked: “I thought they were meant to be against foreign interference in our democracy?”
The tweet got picked up by the Independent MEP, who could soon be officially registered as leader of his new Brexit Party in the coming weeks. He seized on the irony of ‘Russian involvement’ in a pro-EU, UK petition, arguing that an inquiry was needed.
Russian collusion, we need an enquiry here. https://t.co/OsvfVoZA4c
— Nigel Farage (@Nigel_Farage) March 21, 2019
Bennett also noted verifiable interest in the stop Brexit petition from other countries such as Saudi Arabia and even North Korea, which has one signature. It couldn’t be from the big man, surely?!
The tweet triggered an avalanche of seemingly irate Remainers, not seeing the funny side and instead insisting it was “fake news.” Others living in various countries around the world felt the need justify their signatures.
Fake news
— Weiss #BDS 729/871 (@w_nicht) March 21, 2019
I’ve signed from abroad, as I’m entitled to do. Anyone either resident in the UK or a UK citizen may do so. What evidence do you have that there is large scale fraud? I can tell you Brits living abroad are signing in large numbers, especially as so many were disenfranchised.
— 🇪🇺FemmeAuFoyer #FBPE #BitchesAgainstBrexit🇪🇺 (@margarance) March 21, 2019
I signed from Sweden. There was a nice box I ticked; "Are you a UK resident or UK citizen". Yep!
— Jon Upsaliensis (@jonupsaliensis) March 21, 2019
Russia has been at the center of accusations concerning ‘collusion’ in foreign nations’ internal affairs, from the 2016 US presidential election to the 2016 EU referendum in Britain, despite a lack of concrete evidence to support such claims.
Farage announced on Friday that he will lead his new Brexit Party into the European elections if UK MPs decide to delay Brexit beyond May 22.
At the time of publishing this article, the petition had broken the 3 million barrier.
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