Senate Republicans shared a deepfake video of Chuck Schumer, the Senate minority leader, designed to make it seem like Democrats are celebrating the ongoing government shutdown, which has lasted 16 days.
In the deepfake, an AI-generated Schumer repeats the phrase “every day gets better for us,” an actual quote taken out of context from a Punchbowl News article. In the original story, Schumer discussed the Democrats’ healthcare-focused shutdown strategy, and said they were not going to back away from Republicans’ playbook of threats and “bambooz[ling].”
The shutdown is happening because Democrats and Republicans cannot agree to pass a bill funding government through October and beyond. Democrats are trying to hold onto tax credits that would make health insurance cheaper for millions of Americans, secure a reversal to Trump’s Medicaid cuts, and block cuts to government health agencies.
The video was posted Friday on the Senate Republicans’ X account. According to X’s policies, the platform prohibits “deceptively shar[ing] synthetic or manipulated media that are likely to cause harm.” Harmful content includes media that could “mislead people” or “cause significant confusion on public issues.”
Enforcement actions include removing content, labeling warnings, or reducing visibility. X has not, as of the time of this writing, removed the deepfake or added a warning label — though the video does include a watermark denoting its AI origins.
The Schumer video is not the first time X has allowed deepfakes of politicians to remain on the platform. In late 2024, X owner Elon Musk shared a manipulated video of former Vice President Kamala Harris in the lead up to the election, sparking debate about misleading voters.
TechCrunch has reached out to X for comment.
Up to 28 states have enacted laws prohibiting deepfakes of political figures, specifically around campaigns and elections, though most don’t outright ban them if they have clear disclosures. California, Minnesota, and Texas have banned deepfakes intended to influence elections, deceive voters, or harm candidates.
The latest post comes weeks after President Donald Trump posted deepfakes on Truth Social depicting Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries, the House minority leader, making false statements about immigration and voter fraud.
Responding to criticism of the lack of honesty and ethics, Joanna Rodriguez, the National Republican Senatorial Committee communications director, said: “AI is here and not going anywhere. Adapt & win or pearl clutch & lose.”
Topics
© 2025 TechCrunch Media LLC.
Quiz 1:
Who shared a deepfake video of Chuck Schumer on their X account?
A. House Democrats
B. Senate Republicans
C. TechCrunch
D. National Republican Senatorial Committee
Quiz 2:
In what context was the phrase "every day gets better for us" used in the Punchbowl News article about Chuck Schumer?
A. Discussing the ongoing government shutdown
B. Predicting the success of Democrats' healthcare-focused strategy
C. Expressing optimism about the upcoming election
D. Criticizing Republicans' use of threats and "bamboozling" tactics
Quiz 3:
What is the policy of X regarding synthetic or manipulated media?
A. Allowing any content, regardless of its potential to cause harm
B. Prohibiting deceptive sharing of synthetic or manipulated media
C. Adding watermarks to AI-generated content to denote their origins
D. Labeling warnings on potentially misleading content but allowing it to remain visible
In the deepfake, an AI-generated Schumer repeats the phrase “every day gets better for us,” an actual quote taken out of context from a Punchbowl News article. In the original story, Schumer discussed the Democrats’ healthcare-focused shutdown strategy, and said they were not going to back away from Republicans’ playbook of threats and “bambooz[ling].”
The shutdown is happening because Democrats and Republicans cannot agree to pass a bill funding government through October and beyond. Democrats are trying to hold onto tax credits that would make health insurance cheaper for millions of Americans, secure a reversal to Trump’s Medicaid cuts, and block cuts to government health agencies.
The video was posted Friday on the Senate Republicans’ X account. According to X’s policies, the platform prohibits “deceptively shar[ing] synthetic or manipulated media that are likely to cause harm.” Harmful content includes media that could “mislead people” or “cause significant confusion on public issues.”
Enforcement actions include removing content, labeling warnings, or reducing visibility. X has not, as of the time of this writing, removed the deepfake or added a warning label — though the video does include a watermark denoting its AI origins.
The Schumer video is not the first time X has allowed deepfakes of politicians to remain on the platform. In late 2024, X owner Elon Musk shared a manipulated video of former Vice President Kamala Harris in the lead up to the election, sparking debate about misleading voters.
TechCrunch has reached out to X for comment.
Up to 28 states have enacted laws prohibiting deepfakes of political figures, specifically around campaigns and elections, though most don’t outright ban them if they have clear disclosures. California, Minnesota, and Texas have banned deepfakes intended to influence elections, deceive voters, or harm candidates.
The latest post comes weeks after President Donald Trump posted deepfakes on Truth Social depicting Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries, the House minority leader, making false statements about immigration and voter fraud.
Responding to criticism of the lack of honesty and ethics, Joanna Rodriguez, the National Republican Senatorial Committee communications director, said: “AI is here and not going anywhere. Adapt & win or pearl clutch & lose.”
Topics
© 2025 TechCrunch Media LLC.
Quiz 1:
Who shared a deepfake video of Chuck Schumer on their X account?
A. House Democrats
B. Senate Republicans
C. TechCrunch
D. National Republican Senatorial Committee
Quiz 2:
In what context was the phrase "every day gets better for us" used in the Punchbowl News article about Chuck Schumer?
A. Discussing the ongoing government shutdown
B. Predicting the success of Democrats' healthcare-focused strategy
C. Expressing optimism about the upcoming election
D. Criticizing Republicans' use of threats and "bamboozling" tactics
Quiz 3:
What is the policy of X regarding synthetic or manipulated media?
A. Allowing any content, regardless of its potential to cause harm
B. Prohibiting deceptive sharing of synthetic or manipulated media
C. Adding watermarks to AI-generated content to denote their origins
D. Labeling warnings on potentially misleading content but allowing it to remain visible
Similar Readings (5 items)
Conversation: Senate Republicans deepfaked Chuck Schumer, and X hasn’t taken it down
Summary: Senate Republicans deepfaked Chuck Schumer, and X hasn’t taken it down
White House official: Layoffs will start if shutdown talks 'going nowhere'
Summary: US lawmakers fail to avert partial government shutdown
Conversation: White House official: Layoffs will start if shutdown talks 'going nowhere'
Summary
Senate Republicans shared a deepfake video of Chuck Schumer, misrepresenting his views on the ongoing government shutdown. The video, posted on the GOP's X account, repeats an out-of-context quote from Schumer, giving the impression that Democrats are celebrating the shutdown. In reality, Schumer
Reading History
| Date | Name | Words | Time | WPM |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025/10/18 08:49 | Anonymous | 532 | 296s | 107 |
Statistics
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Read CountDetails
ID: 953a37a4-ee76-47de-8e74-a8105e53e005
Category ID: techcrunch
Date: Oct. 18, 2025
Notes: TechCrunch News with Quiz - 2025-10-18
Created: 2025/10/18 08:12
Updated: 2025/12/08 00:01
Last Read: 2025/10/18 08:49