Just days after Twitter took it upon themselves to remind the public that the Russians were responsible for President Donald Trump's 2016 electoral victory, a statement provided by Twitter's head of public policy to the UK Parliament appears to be saying the exact opposite about suspected Russian interference in the Brexit vote.

Rather than insinuating that pro-leave twitter users were duped by Russian agents, the company's head of public policy told Parliamentary investigators that it was unable to confirm links to Russian sources for thousands of "bots" that are part of the parliamentary investigation. Overall, Twitter examined 13,000 Brexit bots and found that only 1% could be conclusively linked to Russia, and that most of these bots have already been suspended.

Couple of new things on UK parliament's investigation into fake news/Russia/Brexit:



– Google, Facebook and Twitter to give live evidence in US on Feb 8.



– New letter from Twitter on 13,000 Bexit bots. 1% were Russian; most suspended now but no number for still existing pic.twitter.com/MXDcXfUYjd — Matt Burgess (@mattburgess1) January 25, 2018

In its statement, Twitter said its findings echoed the results of a study conducted by the Oxford Internet Institute. Researchers from the institute concluded that there was little evidence linking Russia to the Brexit vote.

Finally, it appears the company has conclusively determined: The UK's disruptive decision to leave the European Union was not the work of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Read the full OII report:

Russia and Brexit v27 by zerohedge on Scribd