LONDON: Britain’s deputy prime minister warned on Sunday that the country’s upcoming general election faces threats from hostile actors such as Russia seeking to influence the UK’s democratic process.
The country will go to the polls on Thursday, in an election expected to oust the governing right-wing Conservatives and put the opposition Labour party in power.
His comments came after the Australian Broadcasting Corporation reported that it had uncovered five Facebook pages spreading the same pro-Kremlin talking points.
Some of them encouraged support for the hard-right Reform UK party led by Brexiteer Nigel Farage — a big challenger to the ruling Conservatives in Thursday’s vote.
“There is a threat in all elections, and indeed we see it in this election from hostile state actors seeking to influence the outcome of the election campaign,” Oliver Dowden told Sky News.
“Russia is a prime example of this, and this is a classic example from the Russian playbook,” he added, noting however that the examples were “relatively typical, low-level stuff”.
Farage — an admirer of former US president Donald Trump — dismissed claims that Russian bots might interfere in the election as “cobblers”, using a British slang term for nonsense.
He has been criticised in the campaign for saying that the West provoked Russia’s invasion of its neighbour Ukraine.
His anti-immigration party is tipped by pollsters to contribute to a landslide win by the centre left opposition Labour party by taking votes away from Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s Tories.
Published in Dawn, July 1st, 2024
Dear visitor, the comments section is undergoing an overhaul and will return soon.