Web petition for 2nd EU referendum draws huge interest

By The Associated Press

LONDON – An online petition seeking a second referendum on a British exit from the Europe Union has drawn more than 1.6 million names, a measure of the extraordinary divisiveness of Thursday’s vote to leave the 28-nation bloc.

The online petition site hosted by the House of Commons website even crashed Friday under the weight of the activity as officials said they’d seen unprecedented interest in the measure, which calls on the government to implement a rule that stating if that if “remain” or “leave” camps won less than 60 per cent of the vote with less than a 75 per cent turnout “there should be another referendum.”

“Leave” ended up winning Thursday’s contest with a 52 per cent share of the vote and a turnout of 72 per cent.

Online petitions — which take little more than a valid email address to sign up for and are easy to game — are very poor measures of popular opinion, but officials said Friday that the level of activity on a single petition was unprecedented.

Any petition which draws more than 100,000 names must be considered for debate by members of parliament, but that doesn’t necessarily mean much.

“It has passed the 100,000 mark for it to be debated in Parliament. All that means is that some MPs will say, ‘It’s a terrible shame,’ others will say, ‘Hallelujah’. Then that’s the end of it,” polling guru John Curtice said Saturday. “How many people voted in favour of Leave? Seventeen million. One million is chicken feed by comparison.”

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