advertisement
Pop

White House Quietly Deletes ICE Video After Sabrina Carpenter Backlash

"This video is evil and disgusting," Carpenter previously wrote in response to the White House using her track "Juno."

White House Quietly Deletes ICE Video After Sabrina Carpenter Backlash

Sabrina Carpenter attends The BRIT Awards 2025 at Intercontinental Hotel on March 01, 2025 in London, England.

Lia Toby/Getty Images

After facing sharp criticism from Sabrina Carpenter and her fans, the Trump White House has quietly removed a controversial video that featured her song “Juno” in a post promoting U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) activity.

The post quickly went viral—but not for the reasons the administration may have hoped, as the White House seemingly deleted the post on Friday without explanation.


On Tuesday (Dec. 2), the pop star slammed the government for posting a compilation of United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers chasing, tackling and handcuffing people on the streets while a snippet of the Short n’ Sweet hit “Juno” plays. “This video is evil and disgusting,” Carpenter wrote on X.

advertisement

“Do not ever involve me or my music to benefit your inhumane agenda,” she continued.

Following Carpenter’s objection earlier this week, in a response shared with Newsweek, spokesperson Abigail Jackson said, “Here’s a Short n’ Sweet message for Sabrina Carpenter: We won’t apologize for deporting dangerous criminal illegal murderers, rapists, and pedophiles from our country. Anyone who would defend these sick monsters must be stupid, or is it slow?”

As of press time, the White House has not posted an explanation for the removal, and representatives for Carpenter have not issued additional comment beyond her viral reply. Carpenter closes a breakout year with multiple Hot 100 hits and a sold-out arena run, and “Juno” remains one of her most visible live moments.

The deleted clip followed recent instances in which official Trump-era channels paired pop hits with political messaging — a tactic that’s drawn pushback from artists such as Olivia Rodrigo, who last month condemned the White House for pairing a video encouraging self-deportations to her song “All-American Bitch.”

“Don’t ever use my songs to promote your racist, hateful propaganda,” she wrote at the time.

The recent use of Carpenter’s “Juno” was especially charged given the song’s fan-favorite status on Carpenter’s Short ’n Sweet Tour, where she playfult “arrested” people for being too attractive just before performing “Juno” each night. Before the trek wrapped in November after more than a year on the road, Carpenter had distributed fuzzy pink handcuffs to everyone from Millie Bobby Brown, to TWICE, SZA and Miss Piggy of The Muppets.

advertisement

This article was first published by Billboard U.S.

advertisement
Bruno Mars
John V. Esparza

Bruno Mars

Awards

Bruno Mars Will Have Taken Nearly 10 Years to Release His Follow-Up to a Grammy Album of the Year Winner. Is That a Record?

Barack Obama was president when Mars' last solo studio album was released.

Bruno Mars and Harry Styles recently announced their first new studio albums since they each won the Grammy for album of the year. Mars’ The Romantic, his follow-up to 24K Magic, is due Feb. 27. Styles’ Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally, his follow-up to Harry’s House, is due one week later.

Styles will have had a gap of three years, nine months and 15 days between studio albums, not inordinately long by current standards. Mars will have had a gap of nine years, three months and 10 days between solo studio albums. That’s a long gap but it’s not the record for the longest wait for a studio follow-up to a Grammy-winning album of the year.

keep readingShow less
advertisement