By Alexander J Martin, technology reporter
The government wants to introduce new laws to protect elections and referendums in the UK from the risk of interference by foreign powers.
Announcing the move, the minister for the constitution Kevin Foster MP stated: "There is no evidence that British elections or referendums have been compromised."
However, he added: "But we need to review and refresh our analogue laws for a digital age, and ensure there are robust safeguards against hostile states, foreign lobbyists and shadowy third parties."
According to the government's announcement, the new plans could tackle these potential agents of influence by:
:: Barring people from running for office if found guilty of abusive behaviour;
:: Requiring online election material to clearly state who produced it;
:: Launching a consultation on strengthening laws on foreign donations.
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Any laws would be brought forward later this year and not in time for the European elections later this month, a cabinet office spokesperson told Sky News.
They added that it would be developed with the department for digital, culture, media and sport (DCMS), which would help determine which organisations would need to observe any new requirements on election material.
More from Russia
MPs have in the past questioned whether the government has done enough to investigate election interference in the UK.
A parliamentary inquiry into disinformation has called on the government to investigate the Russian state's alleged attempts to influence the Brexit referendum.
In a report in February, MPs criticised the government's claim that it "has not seen evidence of successful use of disinformation by foreign actors, including Russia, to influence UK democratic processes" despite acknowledging that such disinformation campaigns took place.
It specifically criticised the government saying there had been no evidence of "successful interference" because, as it said, "the term 'successful' is impossible to define in retrospect".
How to determine whether interference campaigns were successful has also been an issue in the US.
A declassified intelligence community assessment in the US claimed that Russia attempted to interfere in the 2016 presidential election in support of Donald Trump, but without affecting the result.

Sky News
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