Cops ask McDonald’s to halt milkshake sales while Farage is in town

18 May, 2019 16:25 / Updated 6 years ago

Scottish police reportedly asked an Edinburgh McDonald’s branch not to sell milkshakes or ice-cream during Nigel Farage’s visit following a spate of attacks from protesters using the dairy products as projectiles.

The former UKIP leader was in town to speak at the Corn Exchange for a Brexit Party campaign rally on Friday evening. Signs informing customers of the milkshake and ice-cream ban were posted in a nearby branch in Chesser.

The milkshake clamp-down follows a spate of beverage-based attacks on far-right activist Tommy Robinson and UKIP MEP candidate Carl Benjamin.

READ MORE: The Brexit Party: UKIP but without the far-right, claims Nigel Farage

The milkshake protest started with Robinson, real name Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, who was targeted with a McDonald’s milkshake in Warrington in footage that quickly went viral. Robinson’s second dairy attack came soon after, during a visit to Greater Manchester while on the campaign trail.

Benjamin was “milkshaked” three times in as many days when he was visiting constituents in Cornwall, Plymouth, and Devon.

READ MORE: ‘How is this not meddling?’ Twitter bans Tommy Robinson, Sargon of Akkad campaign accounts

McDonald’s rival Burger King appeared to take the opportunity to fill a gap in the market by letting customers know via Twitter they will be selling milkshakes “all weekend.”

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