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Road sign changed from America to Mexico in Donald Trump joke

John Devine & Helen Burchell

BBC News, Cambridgeshire

John Devine/BBC A mock road sign with the words "The Mexico" is placed on top of another road sign that says "The America". The sign has white printed letters on a green background. The road sign is placed on a grass vergeJohn Devine/BBC

A road sign that used to read The America now says The Mexico

An anonymous resident has staged a quirky protest against US President Donald Trump by altering street signs in his village.

Mock street signs reading The Mexico have appeared over real signs for a road called The America in Sutton near Ely in recent weeks.

The sign-maker, who did not wish to be named, said he did it after President Trump announced in his inaugural speech in January that he planned to change the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America.

Residents who live on The America said they could see the funny side of the sign name change.

Vanessa Marsh, Royal Mail employee for the area, said she did not think it would be an issue for delivery drivers.

The 54-year-old said she had noticed the sign had changed a couple of weeks ago.

“I thought someone was having a bit of a joke – or is it serious?” she said.

John Devine/BBC A road sign has the name The America on it. The sign has white lettering on a green background and is on wooden posts in shrubbery at the side of a roadJohn Devine/BBC

This is how the signs usually looks

John Devine/BBC Vanessa Marsh is looking at the camera. She has dark hair pulled back off her face and is wearing dark-rimmed spectacles, earrings and a red hooded top. She is standing in the sunshine on a pavement at the side of a small roadJohn Devine/BBC

Vanessa Marsh, who delivers the post, said she did not think the sign would be a problem

Sutton resident Simon Bennett, 61, who has lived on The America for nine years, said: “This did make me laugh – it’s good to have a bit of levity in the current times.

“And everybody that sees it obviously gets the joke and thinks it’s funny.”

Alex Scott, 60, said changing the signs was “typical of the British sense of humour – that we just satirise pomposity”.

“I’ve lived here for 10 years and I love to see that type of thing – long may it continue.”

John Devine/BBC Alex Scott is looking at the camera while standing in from of a doorway to a house. He has short brown/grey hair and dark-rimmed spectacles on. He is wearing a grey jacketJohn Devine/BBC

Alex Scott said he loved the humour of the new sign

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