Angela Rayner, who laughs at rap videos generated by AI, went viral and gained hundreds of thousands of views within a day.
A Labour MP who resigns as deputy prime minister transforms into a rude rapper in skit.
She declares:
Virus parody, title How many homes can Rayner buy?Lamphun's stamp duty scandal.
In the video, a digitally-generated Raynor wears a fur coat over a tracksuit, flushes cash and smokes two cigarettes at once.
One poem shows her wrapping. “He bought me one house and bought me two.
AI-inspired Rayner continues in the Dispatch Box:
“How many houses do I name, Big Anjin Dansin' at Commons Hall, Taxman Creein, Rainers Millin'; one rule for me, not for you!”
Raynor is also shown dancing in front of a flat with a “sold” sign so that money rains from the sky.
In another scene, she overflows cash with a rubber dinghy.
Skit teases the rows that include a decline in her stamp obligation.
She lately admitted to avoiding taxes of around £40,000 when purchasing a £800,000 beach flat in Hove. She paid £30,000 for the second property in lieu of £70,000 of £70,000.
@winston.churchill4554 #foryouupag? #treendingsong #capcut? Original Sound – Winston Churchill
The scandal forced the minister's ethics advisor to force her to resign before Sir Laurie Magnus handed his verdict.
In her resignation letter, Angela Rayner said she “deeply regrets” her decision not to seek “additional specialist tax advice” by purchasing Hove's property.
She added that her family “have to consider the important sacrifice of continuing media pressure.”
Reiner looked back on her journey from “a teenage mother from the council real estate in Stockport” to the highest level of government, describing it as “an honor of my life.”
Her lawyers denounced her team in a scapegoat, saying they calculated their taxes based on the information she provided.
Graffiti brands her a “tax evasionist.”
The scandal also won the nickname “Three Pads” because she owns Brighton Flat, a constituency house and an elegant apartment in London.
AI parody only fuels ock ha ha. Viewers have suggested online that the ex-deputy PM's “Nightclub Double” could prove to be more popular than the original.
