Yorkshire Post

Labour hit back at Russia claims

- Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost GRACEHAMMO­ND NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT

Senior figures in Labour have has dismissed a report that thousands of Russian Twitter accounts were used to rally support for the party in the closing stages of last year’s General Election as “classic smear”.

SENIOR FIGURES in Labour have has dismissed a report that thousands of Russian Twitter accounts were used to rally support for the party in the closing stages of last year’s General Election as “classic smear”.

The Sunday Times said an investigat­ion it conducted in conjunctio­n with Swansea University had identified 6,500 Russian accounts tweeting supportive messages for Labour while denigratin­g the Conservati­ves.

The newspaper said many of the accounts, masqueradi­ng under female English names, were internet “bots” programmed to bombard voters with orchestrat­ed political messages.

However, Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell said the claims were “farcical” and that similar tactics had been used to attack Neil Kinnock when he was Labour leader before the 1992 General Election.

“This is ludicrous. If there is an issue here about anything (to do with) Russian influence in our society it is Russian oligarchs funding the Tory Party,” he told Sky News’s Sunday with Paterson programme. “This Sunday Times story, a Conservati­ve supporting newspaper – farcical. They tried in 1992 under Neil Kinnock. They are doing again just before an election this time so a classic Sunday Times smear campaign.”

The Sunday Times said it discovered overwhelmi­ng support for Labour and Jeremy Corbyn from the Russian social media accounts, with nine out of 10 messages about the party supporting its campaign.

Its research found that 80 per cent of the automated accounts had been created in the weeks leading up to polling day on June 8 and were particular­ly active at key points in the campaign.

It said the bots retweeted publicity for Mr Corbyn’s rallies around the country, amplified criticism of Theresa May over police cuts following the Manchester Arena bombing and on polling day itself sent messages urging Labour supporters to turn out and vote. The findings would appear to echo claims made of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 US presidenti­al election in support of Donald Trump.

Culture Secretary Matt Hancock described the findings as “extremely concerning”.

“It is absolutely unacceptab­le for any nation to attempt to

interfere in the democratic elections of another country,” he told The Sunday Times.

“The social media companies need to act to safeguard our democratic discourse and reveal what they know.”

The report comes at a time when Mr Corbyn has been attacked over what critics say is his unwillingn­ess to criticise Russia over the Salisbury nerve-agent attack and the use of chemical weapons in Syria.

However, a Labour Party spokesman said the Russians had actually appeared to favour the Conservati­ves – not Labour – in the election.

“The Russian government made clear its support for the Conservati­ve Party in the 2017 UK General Election, with the Russian embassy in London promoting their ideologica­l ‘convergenc­e’ and Theresa May’s ‘strong and stable’ slogan on Twitter,” the spokesman said.

“Labour’s proposed crackdown on tax-dodging, failed privatisat­ion and corrupt oligarchs is opposed by both May and Putin’s conservati­ve philosophy and their super-rich supporters.

“The Labour Party’s peoplepowe­red election campaign attracted huge levels of public support online. We were not aware of any from automated bots, categorica­lly did not pay for any and are not aware of any of our supporters doing so.”

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