Britain First Forgot To Delete These Embarrassing Comments On Their Facebook Election Video

Ironically, Britain First supporters appear be a minority on their own page.

On Friday evening, Britain First posted a Facebook video deploring the election of Sadiq Khan, London's first Muslim mayor.

An almost teary-eyed deputy leader, Jayda Fransen, said: "So, London has voted and I'm very sorry to say London now has its first Muslim mayor.

"This is a very sad day and I'm sure it is not what our grandparents fought for.

"For a man who follows an extreme and barbaric ideology to have control of our capital is an outrage."

Teary-eyed: Britain First Deputy Leader Jayda Fransen in the Facebook video
Teary-eyed: Britain First Deputy Leader Jayda Fransen in the Facebook video
Facebook

Britain First often highlight their strong presence on Facebook as evidence of their popularity, and at first glance the fact the video has been viewed over 1.8 million times would seem to suggest there is something in this.

But a look at the comments on the video paint an entirely different picture.

The far-right group is known to heavily police the comment section on their posts, deleting remarks that don't support their extremist views, but appear to have slipped up this time.

The top-rated comment with 4,926 likes (nearly half the amount given to that actual post itself) is this one...

Facebook

In second place (Facebook automatically ranks comments in order of popularity) is this effort...

Facebook

And so it continues...

Facebook
Facebook
Facebook
Facebook
Facebook
Facebook

It's only when we get to comment number nine do we get any actual support for Britain First.

Facebook

Even then, the next one is this zinger.

Facebook

Further - and more obvious - proof of the group's unpopularity came from the elections themselves.

Paul Golding, the right-wing party’s leader and London mayoral candidate, made a ‘V for Victory’ gesture after his pitiful haul of 31,372 votes was announced, placing him eighth out of 12 candidates, with only three largely unknown independents and the BNP polling fewer.

Golding, whose party has ‘invaded’ mosques and halal butchers, made headlines for what he did next at the late night announcement: turning his back on Sadiq Khan during the Labour candidate’s victory speech.

Perhaps most telling was the fact many people didn’t even know who he was...

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