Video

Led By Donkeys billboards praise coronavirus ‘heroes’ and calls out the ‘zeroes’

One of the Led By Donkeys billboard campaigns which compares coronavirus "heroes" and "zeroes". Photograph: Led By Donkeys/PA Wire.

Political campaign group Led By Donkeys has swapped its political campaigning to use its platform to praise heroism amid the coronavirus outbreak.

Email this article to a friend To send a link to this page you must be logged in.

Become a Supporter Almost four years after its creation The New European goes from strength to strength across print and online, offering a pro-European perspective on Brexit and reporting on the political response to the coronavirus outbreak, climate change and international politics. But we can only continue to grow with your support.

One of the Led By Donkeys billboard campaigns which compares coronavirus "heroes" and "zeroes". Photograph: Led By Donkeys/PA Wire. One of the Led By Donkeys billboard campaigns which compares coronavirus "heroes" and "zeroes". Photograph: Led By Donkeys/PA Wire.

The group was originally formed to fight Brexit, but is now posting billboards in towns across the UK which compare “heroes” and “zeroes”.

An example in Hereford contrasts a tweet from a care home worker who has just spent eight hours disinfecting her residents’ living space with the news that Sir Richard Branson forced his Virgin workers to take unpaid leave.

Another in Christchurch, Dorset, shows two news reports - one on former footballers Gary Neville and Ryan Giggs freely opening their hotels to NHS staff and another on Sports Direct hiking the price of sports equipment by more than 50% in the wake of the pandemic.

“At its heart the Led By Donkeys project has always been about political accountability and holding the powerful to account,” Led By Donkeys co-founder Oliver Knowles told the PA news agency.

One of the Led By Donkeys billboard campaigns which compares coronavirus "heroes" and "zeroes". Photograph: Led By Donkeys/PA Wire. One of the Led By Donkeys billboard campaigns which compares coronavirus "heroes" and "zeroes". Photograph: Led By Donkeys/PA Wire.

“The point we’re making is at times of crisis, millions of people around the world step up and give more of themselves, while clearly others take away.

“We’re trying to praise those people who are doing really heroic stuff because they’re on the frontline or going the extra mile or helping a neighbour... Versus those who already have huge amounts of money and seem to see this as an opportunity to take more.

“More from the taxpayer, more from their staff - it’s essentially profiteering from the crisis and that’s appalling behaviour that needs calling out.”

“Constructive criticism, even during a time of crisis, is not only valid but it’s important,” Knowles added.

“We want to take great care to not impede the response to the crisis, but it is important that nobody is off-limits.”

Led By Donkeys first went viral in early 2019 by plastering politicians’ past statements onto billboards in an effort to highlight hypocrisy.

Knowles added that the group has been “overwhelmed” by the response to their new billboards, which have been widely shared on social media.

“We weren’t sure how these would do as this is a different issue to Brexit... but actually we’ve been really overwhelmed with the response,” he said.

Have your say Send your letters for publication to The New European by emailing letters@theneweuropean.co.uk and pick up an edition each Thursday for more comment and analysis. Find your nearest stockist here or subscribe to a print or digital edition for just £13. You can also join our readers' Facebook group to keep the discussion and debate going with thousands of fellow pro-Europeans.

“People have offered really great comments, not just to Led By Donkeys but to the heroes we’re praising as well.”

Knowles said the group is taking care to ensure they are “playing by the rules” when putting up the billboards during the UK lockdown.

“We’re using proper billboard companies and they’re sending individual team members out to put up the boards to keep social distancing intact,” he said.