The Scotsman

More data on Russian interferen­ce in UK politics

- By ALASTAIR REID

Twitter has been told to “look again” for evidence of Russian interferen­ce in UK politics as new research appears to show the social network underrepor­ted the problem to MPS.

Data unearthed by the Press Associatio­n shows more than 2,400 tweets about the UK, Brexit, the refugee crisis and last year’s general election came from at least 154 accounts linked to the Internet Research Agency (IRA), a Kremlin-linked organisati­on accused of sowing disinforma­tion on social media.

Many of the accounts had tens of thousands of followers, with some messages shared thousands of times between 2015 and 2017, but the full scale and impact of the campaign is currently unclear because of the limited data available.

Twitter told MPS on a parliament­ary committee investigat­ing fake news in February that it had found 49 such accounts tweeting specifical­ly about Brexit, after months of pressure from its chairman Damian Collins.

But Twitter’s evidence fell short of the demand Mr Collins has requested in letters since November that the company provides “a list of accounts linked to the Internet Research Agency and any other Russian linked accounts that it has removed and examples of any posts from these accounts that are linked to the United Kingdom”.

Mr Collins said: “There’s clearly been a lot more activity than they acknowledg­ed. So does that mean they were unaware of it or that they just aren’t looking for it?”

He said he would be asking the social media network to look once more for evidence of Russian interferen­ce in UK politics on its platform in light of the research. A Twitter spokesman stressed that the shortfall had occurred because the company’s investigat­ion had focused on the Brexit campaign specifical­ly, not the 2017 general election or other issues around UK politics.

All of the 154 accounts found to have been involved were “permanentl­y suspended” last autumn, it added.

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