Labour was last night forced to delete a bizarre AI-generated video promoting its policies over its use of a Brazilian dance track with obscene lyrics about drugs and sex.
The video entitled ‘Labour’s Plan to Change Britain (as animals)’ featured AI-generated rabbits, owls and cows dressed as nurses, teachers and builders overlayed with the party’s missions for government.
It also depicted a British bulldog dressed as a policeman with the caption: ‘You’ll feel safer with more police on the beat.’
But the post – which was uploaded to the party’s official TikTok account and amassed more than 100,000 views – sampled a 2023 song by Sao Paulo-based DJ Holanda called ‘Montagem Coral’.
The track, which is in Portuguese, contains graphic lyrics about young women being ‘addicted’ to drugs and the artist being a ‘magnet for s****’.
A segment of the recording used by Labour describes having sex with a ‘naughty young girl’ who is addicted to marijuana.
It follows a recent trend on TikTok which has seen the growth in artificially-generated content.
Following the revelation, Tory safeguarding spokesman Alicia Kearns said: ‘Do you think it’s acceptable (Home Secretary) Yvette Cooper for your party to put out videos with lyrics encouraging men to get young girls on drugs so they can have sex with them?
The now deleted Tiktok clip featured a series of animals dressed as different professions to illustrate the Government’s missions
A large dog dressed as a policeman in the Labour advert, with the caption ‘You’ll feel safer with more police on the beat’
The video sampled a 2023 song by Sao Paulo-based DJ Holanda called ‘Montagem Coral’ which contains lyrics about young women being ‘addicted’ to drugs
‘So much for telling us we’ll feel safer with you in charge.’
Ex-Tory minister Neil O’Brien added: ‘Incredible – the other lyrics are actually far worse. Starmer types are so desperate to be ‘down with the kids’ they validate all this horrible stuff.’
A Labour spokesman told The Mail: ‘The post is an adaptation of a viral social media trend and contains a mix of two music tracks.
‘We acknowledge the translation of the lyrics are completely inappropriate. We apologise and the video has now been deleted.’
The TikTok video, which was published on Sunday, began with an image of a lion dressed in a suit and red tie outside Parliament, followed by the British bulldog police officer walking down a suburban street.
It then had a rabbit dressed in NHS uniform with a stethoscope around its neck. While folding its arms, ‘you’ll be seen sooner by our NHS’ flashes up on the screen.
Next was a badger at a railway station, with Labour promising ‘better rail services by bringing railways into public control’, bringing them under a new operating body Great British Rail.
The video then focused on Labour’s plans for education ‘with funded breakfast clubs’, using an owl dressed as a teacher flying over a school building.
Following this, a hedgehog dressed in overalls and walking alongside a windmill promised ‘billpayers are protected, with secure homegrown energy’ amid Labour’s pledge to decarbonise electricity by 2030.
Housing completes the bizarre video, as cow in construction uniform stood in a building site promising viewers ‘decent affordable homes for you and your family’.
A rabbit in a nurse’s uniform with the strapline ‘You’ll be seen sooner by our NHS’
For the party’s environmental pledges, the clip showed a hedgehog standing next to a wind turbine promising ‘Billpayers are protected, with secure home-grown energy’
The video initially prompted criticism for relying on artificial intelligence amid concerns over its potential impact on the creative sector.
One social media user said: ‘Labour will use AI slop and ignore the arts yet again.’
A second accused Labour of being ‘out-of-touch with young people’, while a third commented: ‘AI is incredibly resource-wasteful, and takes work away from skilled artists. Bad idea.’
Labour is not the first party to publish AI content online, with Reform UK posting a parody film criticising Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, deputy leader Angela Rayner and RMT union boss Mick Lynch.