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'Ban Donald Trump' petition: Website crashes after more than 100,000 sign to reject Republican candidate

George Osborne has rejected calls to ban the candidate, instead calling for a 'robust debate' to defeat his 'nonsense'

Rose Troup Buchanan
Wednesday 09 December 2015 08:55 EST
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The sheer number of people signing a petition calling for Donald Trump to be denied entry to the UK has crashed the government website.

PetitionParliament.uk was down for around 20 minutes on Wednesday morning shortly after the petition reached 100,000 signatures.

It now stands at over 160,000 with reports claiming as many as four people every second have signed the petition since it was created just 24 hours ago.

The Republican presidential hopeful released a statement on Monday calling for a “complete shutdown” on all Muslim immigration to the US, provoking near-global condemnation and guaranteeing wall-to-wall coverage.

His announcement followed a Monmouth poll that appeared to place rival Republican Ted Cruz ahead of the billionaire for the first time in the race to the White House.

It was followed by a claim parts of London and Paris are “so radicalised” police officers are “afraid for their very lives” when they enter these districts.

British politicians – including David Cameron and London mayor Boris Johnson – have condemned his remarks. But Chancellor George Osborne rejected calls to ban Trump, instead calling for a “robust debate” to defeat his “nonsense”.

Trump, who was long written-off by political pundits and observers as a joke candidate, has confounded traditional views as his polling figures continue to rise despite seemingly endless gaffes that would have derailed other candidates’ campaigns.

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