Hugh Grant is not the only one trying to influence the British to vote tactically in today's parliamentary elections. Several British major media have presented their own guides on how to do the exact opposite of voting with the heart and instead voting on the candidate who has the greatest opportunity to knock out the party you do not like.

Promotions with different candidates

Actor Hugh Grant has been clear that he is against a Brexit and the Conservative Tories. Prior to today's parliamentary elections, he has contemplated campaigning with various candidates - regardless of party, who have the opportunity to win parliamentary seats in his one-man constituencies. All to prevent the Tories from gaining majority in the parliamentary elections. One way to circumvent the polite electoral system has been to vote in tactics and on the Internet there are many different sites where you can enter your zip code and find out which candidate you should choose to knock out the other party in your district.

Boris Johnson in Love Actually parody

The closest Hugh Grant has ever come to politics is to play a dancing prime minister in the Christmas movie Love Actually. But Boris Johnson has also coined the film in his latest campaign movie - where, like a scene in the film, he brings along a portable CD player with Christmas music, taps on a woman's door and quietly displays his political messages on large white paper. In the film, Andrew Lincoln declares his hopeless love for Keira Knightley in this way, while his husband and best friend sit inside and watch TV.

Copied Labor

Hugh Grant was quick to comment on Johnson's actions.

- I noted that the note that says "on Christmas you tell the truth" was not included. I guess the PR people felt that it didn't feel right to put such a note in Boris Johnson's hands, says the actor at a press conference.

But Boris Johnson's PR staff wasn't the first to come up with the idea of ​​Love Actually. Several weeks before Johnson's video was released, Labor candidate Rosena Allin-Khan released a similar film in which she convinced a conservative voter to switch sides. Allin-Kahn is now accusing the prime minister of copying her film.