Fury as Labour TikTok video features song ‘encouraging men to groom young girls’

Labour has been forced to delete a TikTok video uploaded yesterday, after it emerged the song they used included lyrics talking about ‘punching young girls in the pussy’.

The clip, posted to the party’s official account this weekend, saw AI-generated animals overlayed with Labour’s pledges.

It followed a recent trend on which saw the growth in accessible artificially generated video content.

This afternoon the party was plunged into crisis, however, after it was revealed that when translated the song’s lyrics spoke about getting young girls addicted to sex and drugs.

It also repeated the phrase: “Just punch in the pussy of the young girl.”

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The Labour Party has now deleted the TikTok (Image: Getty)

The words, translated from the original song by Montagem Coral feat. McCyclope, continue: “He called me forbidden because I get addicted fast.

“Perfect combination is sex, beer and marijuana; the young ones got addicted, everyone is enjoying the wave.”

The humiliation for Labour was heightened given the ongoing row about child sex grooming by Muslim rape gangs, and whether or not the Government will give the go-ahead for a full independent inquiry.

Following the revelation about the , top Tory Alicia Kearns blasted: “Do you think it’s acceptable, 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, and celebrating punching women in their vaginas?”

“So much for telling us we’ll feel safer with you in charge.”

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Top Tory Alicia Kearns demanded answers from Home Secretary Yvette Cooper (Image: Getty)

Shadow cabinet member 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.”

“What a day to do it too.”

Responding to the criticism, a Labour spokesman told the Express they have now taken the meme video down.

They confirmed: “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 video used AI to generate animals explaining Labour’s policy, including a burley-looking policeman-bulldog promising that more bobbies on the beat will make Britons “feel safer”.

It also saw a bunny dressed as a nurse, and a lion outside the Houses of Parliament.

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