An investigation is underway after it was discovered that more than 77,000 signatures were made with IP addresses from all over the world, including Ghana, Vietnam, Uganda, Turkmenistan, the Cayman Islands, Iceland and Tunisia. The Vatican — with a population of just 800 — returned more than 39,000 signatures.
Read a statement from our Chair on the second referendum petition. pic.twitter.com/TzrtQXTwTE
— Petitions Committee (@HoCpetitions) 26 June 2016
Helen Jones, the chair of the Petitions Committee, said:
"The Government Digital Service are taking action to investigate and, where necessary, remove fraudulent signatures. People adding fraudulent signatures to this petition should know that they undermine the cause they pretend to support."
@richardbranson no they haven't. There's bots and scripts and 4Chan. 33000 votes from the Vatican??? pic.twitter.com/u24erWkezw
— Dan Squire (@Dan_Squire_85) June 27, 2016
The petition — which had garnered more than 4 million signatures by Wednesday (June 29) — calls "upon HM Government to implement a rule that, if the Remain or Leave vote is less than 60 percent based on a turnout less than 75 percent, there should be another referendum."
The petition was originally started by a campaigner for the Leave group, William Oliver Healey, in May, when it appeared that the Remain group was leading the polls. However, he has said it has now been hijacked by the Remain group, unhappy at the outcome.
Fake? New #petition calling for #UK to stay in #EU signed by NKoreans, Napoleon…what? https://t.co/SWMEs6I9cVhttps://t.co/vCFpTCvit5
— RT (@RT_com) June 28, 2016
Although the many non-fraudulent signatures exceed the trigger point of 100,000 for a parliamentary debate, this by no means that politicians in the Houses of Parliament will actually do anything about it.
So apparently many of the signatures on the petition for a second referendum are from abroad. Typical of the UK, outsourcing everything.
— Karl Sharro (@KarlreMarks) June 26, 2016
if Facebook activates its Bangladesh click farm, the UK referendum petition will pass 1 billion signatures by midnight
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) June 25, 2016
The last time a petition triggered a debate was when there were calls for US presidential candidate Donald Trump to be barred from entering the UK. MPs spoke about the matter for two hours before resolving that it had "considered" the petition. Trump arrived in Scotland the day after the EU referendum.