White House Doubles Down On Sabrina Carpenter Beef With Another Distasteful Video
The White House has shared yet another distasteful video featuring Sabrina Carpenter, off the back of the singer’s recent comments about the Trump administration.
Last week, the White House’s official X account posted a video clip featuring a montage of ICE deportation footage, accompanied by a snippet of Sabrina’s song Juno.
Responding on the same platform the following day, the Grammy winner wrote back: “This video is evil and disgusting. Do not ever involve me or my music to benefit your inhumane agenda.”
this video is evil and disgusting. Do not ever involve me or my music to benefit your inhumane agenda.
— Sabrina Carpenter (@SabrinaAnnLynn) December 2, 2025
At the time, White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson responded, in a statement filled with references to the Grammy nominee’s work: “Here’s a Short n’ Sweet message for Sabrina Carpenter: We won’t apologise for deporting dangerous criminal illegal murderers, rapists, and paedophiles from our country.”
The statement concluded: “Anyone who would defend these sick monsters must be stupid, or is it slow?”
Shortly afterwards, the White House’s social media post disappeared, but it was then followed by another clip.
This second post featured a video of the chart-topping singer on Saturday Night Live with cast member Marcello Hernández, once again interspersed with clips of real ICE detainments.
HuffPost UK has contacted Sabrina Carpenter’s representatives for comment in light of the White House’s latest post.
Of course, the Manchild singer is far from the only artist to have taken issue with Donald Trump and his administration for using their music without permission throughout his political career.
Back in July, Jess Glynne found herself in a similar position to Sabrina when the White House posted yet another ICE deportation montage using the “Jet2 holiday” trending sound, which incorporated the British singer-songwriter’s number one hit Hold My Hand.
Hitting back at the time, Jess wrote on social media: “This post honestly makes me sick. My music is about love, unity, and spreading positivity – never about division or hate.”