Share this @internewscast.com
Angela Rayner’s stamp duty controversy has led to a mocking AI-created video that portrays her as a bold drill rapper proclaiming: ‘Starmer’s embarrassed, but I’m alright, you pay your full share, I bypass the line’.
With her political career on the precipice, the Deputy Prime Minister is lampooned in a viral skit entitled: ‘How Many Homes Can Rayner Buy?’
At 45, Ms. Rayner is depicted sporting a fur coat over casual attire, flaunting stacks of cash. This alludes to her delayed acknowledgment of underpaying £40,000 in stamp duty for an £800,000 coastal property purchased in Hove in May.
The video, viewed by thousands online within 24 hours, features the digital Rayner rapping: ‘Got myself one home, then two; flipped another place, tax clueless; £80K saved with a Brighton hue; Dodging more dues than most do’.
The AI version of Angela also raps at the parliamentary dispatch box: ‘How many homes, I’ll list them all; Big Ange dancing in the Commons hall; Taxman’s weeping, Rayner’s beaming; One rule for me, none for you!’.
Additionally, she is shown dancing energetically amidst sold signs, with cash falling from above, and later puffing on two cigarettes in a cash-filled rubber dinghy.

Angela Rayner’s tax woes sparked a viral AI rap video where she brags about making the taxman cry by not paying the correct stamp duty


Ms Rayner is depicted in the video outside a house in Brighton and in a dinghy off the coast with wads of cash

She is also AI-generated in the Commons, rapping at the despatch box

Angela Rayner’s political standing appears precarious, as her angered legal team recently accused her of making them a ‘scapegoat’ for her tax issues.
Her political career is hanging by a thread today after her furious lawyers last night accused her of making them a ‘scapegoat’ for her stamp duty fiasco.
The Deputy Prime Minister is skating on thin ice as ministerial ethics adviser Sir Laurie Magnus prepares to deliver his verdict as soon as today.
It comes after Ms Rayner tried to blame legal advisers for her not paying enough stamp duty on her flat in Hove, only for them to hit back with a devastating riposte that threatens her career.
High-street conveyancing firm Verrico & Associates insisted they had acted ‘on the figures and the information provided by Ms Rayner’.
In a withering condemnation, the family firm’s 82-year-old managing director Joanna Verrico said they were being made scapegoats and added: ‘I have got the arrows stuck in my back to show it.’
Meanwhile, Sir Keir Starmer indicated he is ready to sack Ms Rayner if she has broken the ministerial code.
The Prime Minister vowed to ‘act on whatever the report is’ into his deputy’s tax affairs, but refused to guarantee her dismissal five times.
Ms Rayner gave a tearful interview to Sky News’s Beth Rigby and a statement on Wednesday in which she laid the blame for her troubles on her lawyers.

Sir Laurie Magnus is investigating whether Ms Rayner broke the ministerial code, following her admission that she did not pay enough stamp duty on a flat she bought in Hove (pictured) this year

Rayner’s £650,000 constituency home (pictured) in Ashton-under-Lyne

The Deputy Prime Minister also has a grace and favour home at Admiralty House in central London
Ms Rayner’s political fate now hangs on the Prime Minister’s ethics adviser Sir Laurie as he prepares to deliver his verdict as soon as today over whether she broke ministerial rules.
After days of stonewalling, Ms Rayner, 45, belatedly admitted underpaying £40,000 of stamp duty on the £800,000 seaside flat she bought in Hove in May.
She should have paid £70,000 instead of £30,000, but she blamed the ‘mistake’ on ‘legal advice that I received that said that I was liable to pay the standard stamp duty’.
Last night her version of events was dealt a serious blow by Verrico & Associates, based in Herne Bay, Kent, which issued a bombshell statement saying it had calculated the stamp duty ‘strictly based on the facts and information provided to us’ – and that it did not offer tax advice.
Mrs Verrico, who founded the practice in 1994 assisted by her three daughters, later told the Telegraph: ‘We acted for Ms Rayner when she purchased the flat in Hove. We did not and never have given tax or trust advice. It’s something we always refer our clients to an accountant or tax expert for.
‘The stamp duty for the Hove flat was calculated using HMRC’s own online calculator based on the figures and the information provided by Ms Rayner. That’s what we used and it told us we had to pay £30,000 based on the information provided to us.
‘We believe that we did everything correctly and in good faith. Everything was exactly as it should be.
‘We probably are being made scapegoats for all this and I have got the arrows stuck in my back to show it. We are not an inexperienced firm, but we’re not qualified to give advice on trust and tax matters and we advise clients to seek expert advice on these.’

Managing director Joanna Verrico (pictured today) said: ‘We acted for Ms Rayner when she purchased the flat in Hove. We did not and never have given tax or trust advice. It’s something we always refer our clients to an accountant or tax expert for’

The Prime Minister vowed to ‘act on whatever the report is’ into his deputy’s tax affairs – but refused five times to guarantee her dismissal
It is understood Ms Rayner is arguing she received at least three pieces of legal advice, including from the trust overseeing her disabled son’s affairs as well as from a conveyancer, supporting her initial position.
But she has yet to reveal if any other lawyer gave her further advice to support her claim she had gone through proper channels and been misadvised.
MFG Solicitors of Kidderminster, which was involved in conveyancing at her family home in Ashton-under-Lyne, said it ‘did not act for Ms Rayner in the purchase of her property in Hove, nor did we provide any tax-related advice in relation to it’. And law firm Shoosmiths, which previously acted for her, also ruled itself out.
As the mystery grew over her flat purchase last week, Ms Rayner sought advice from a tax barrister – who told her this week that she had been wrong not to pay the higher amount of stamp duty, prompting her mea culpa on Wednesday.
Last night Dan Neidle, a tax expert who has advised the Labour Party, tweeted: ‘It’s looking increasingly like Ms Rayner didn’t actually obtain tax advice before this week.’
So far Ms Rayner, who is also the Housing Secretary, has refused to say which firms she consulted before the Hove transaction.
Verrico is a small conveyancing firm that does not employ any qualified solicitors.
Instead, they are licensed conveyancers who only focus on property advice.
The barrister who gave Ms Rayner the later advice is reported to have been Jonathan Peacock, a tax specialist who has been a KC for nearly 25 years. It is understood she commissioned him last Friday and received a draft opinion on Monday – the day the Prime Minister was still insisting she had done nothing wrong.
Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch said: ‘This is yet more damning evidence that Angela Rayner has not been honest with the British public.’