Katie Price wants PM to act over trolls after her son Harvey was abused
- Published
Katie Price is calling on the new prime minister to help crack down on trolls.
She's been speaking to Newsbeat about abuse directed at her son Harvey, who's disabled.
"I hate trolls anyway, but when it comes to Harvey, if I don't stick up for him, who will?" she asks.
The 38-year-old says she's getting ready to start a new campaign to try to get social media sites to check out people's identities.
"I don't care what anybody says to me. I've been called everything, so I'm quite tolerant to it. But to Harvey, it's sick," she tells us.
"People make up accounts in Harvey's name. It's just sick, it's like they're obsessed with him. What does Harvey do to them?"
Harvey, who's 14, is autistic and has Prader-Willi syndrome, meaning he gains weight easily and doesn't know when he is full. He's also partially blind.
"They call him the N word. Some bring his biological dad into it, blaming me for him being black, blaming me for his disabilities, making fun of his disabilities.
"He doesn't understand," she says. "But I understand and I won't let it drop."
She says she's committed to fighting back against trolls.
"Now we have a new prime minister, Theresa May, it would be nice to get the government involved," says Katie.
"With any social media there should be something like the fingerprint you have with your phone so you can identify who everyone is.
"Anyone can write and email, can go on Facebook with different [profiles]. There needs to be more of a lockdown so people can be traced - not even just for trolling, it can be for anything."
Last year, a man was arrested after editing Harvey into a video to suggest he was having sex with him.
No further action was taken against him.
"They could have made an example of him," she says. "I was gutted. But one good thing about being in the public eye, you can make people aware of things."
In May, Harvey swore live on ITV's Loose Women when talking about trolls.
Katie says that's had a big impact.
"In Glastonbury someone had a big flag [quoting Harvey] and in Spain these two people had what Harvey said tattooed on them, saying good on you.
"Since Loose Women it has calmed down. I named and shamed a few of them on Twitter. They obviously don't like it back, but I'm not going to stop."
She says she's been contacted with phone numbers for some of the trolls, but says when Loose Women got in touch with them, none of them wanted to come on the show.
Katie says her campaign may be named after Harvey.
"Without him I wouldn't have even done this," she says.
"It's going to be a massive campaign. I want to get T-shirts made up, get celebs involved just to make a bigger awareness of it to see if there can be a change.
"If it means getting the government involved, I'll do what I can.
"I'm not going to drop it. Everything I do I do properly on a big scale. I'm going to follow this through."
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