David
Lammy: JD Vance agrees that sexualised AI images on X are ‘unacceptable’
Exclusive:
US vice-president ‘sympathetic’ to concerns over Grok-generated pornography,
says deputy PM
Rajeev
Syal and Jessica Elgot
Sat 10
Jan 2026 17.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jan/10/ai-generated-sexualised-images-x-jd-vance-grok
JD Vance,
the US vice-president, has agreed that it is “entirely unacceptable” for
platforms such as X to allow the proliferation of AI-generated sexualised
images of women and children, David Lammy has told the Guardian.
The
deputy prime minister said Vance, usually known as an AI enthusiast, expressed
concern about how the technology was being used to fuel “hyper-pornographied
slop” online when they met in Washington on Thursday.
The
comments come amid a growing transatlantic row over the use of X’s artificial
intelligence chatbot, Grok, to manipulate thousands of images of women and
sometimes children to remove their clothing or put them in sexual positions.
Keir
Starmer, the prime minister, has warned that the social media platform could be
blocked in the UK after “unlawful” and “disgusting” images were generated.
Supporters
of the US president, Donald Trump, including the congresswoman Anna Paulina
Luna, have called for sanctions against the UK if it goes through with a ban.
Elon Musk, the owner of X, wrote on the platform on Friday that the UK
government “want any excuse for censorship” and described the British
government as “fascist”.
In an
interview with the Guardian, Lammy said he addressed the use of Grok with Vance
and found the vice-president “sympathetic” to the UK’s position.
“We
discussed Greenland and I also raised with him the Grok issue and the
horrendous, horrific situation in which this new technology is allowing
deepfakes and the manipulation of images of women and children, which is just
absolutely abhorrent. He agreed with me that it was entirely unacceptable,”
Lammy said on Friday.
Asked if
Vance was sympathetic to the UK government’s stance on Grok, Lammy said: “I
think he recognised the very seriousness with which images of women and
children could be manipulated in this way, and he recognised how despicable,
unacceptable, that is and I found him sympathetic to that position. And in
fact, we’ve been in touch again, today, about this very serious issue.”
“He
confirmed with me that he had seen that there had been some changes announced
by X as of this morning.”
On
Friday, X appeared to have changed Grok’s settings, with the chatbot telling
users that only paid subscribers could ask it to manipulate images.
However,
reports suggested this only applied to those making requests in reply to other
posts, and other ways of editing or creating images, including on a separate
Grok website, remained open.
Vance
also expressed concerns about the use of AI technology, adding that it was
being used to fuel “hyper-pornographied slop”, sources at the meeting said.
Liz
Kendall, the technology secretary, has said she would back the media regulator
Ofcom if it decided ban X if it failed to comply with UK laws. “Sexually
manipulating images of women and children is despicable and abhorrent,” she
said. The media watchdog, Ofcom, confirmed it would accelerate an investigation
into X.
Musk
responded by sharing a post from US legislator Luna threatening to issue
sanctions against Keir Starmer and the UK if X was blocked in the country.
Lammy and
Vance met at a particularly sensitive time for US-UK relations after Trump
repeated his claims to Greenland following a US operation to capture the
Venezuelan president, Nicolás Maduro.
Starmer,
and other European leaders, issued a statement on Tuesday warning the
Danish-held territory’s security must be ensured collectively by Nato.
Lammy
said he and Vance discussed the war in Ukraine, including “giving the
Ukrainians the security guarantees that they require” and the “emerging
situation in Venezuela”, as well as tensions over Greenland.
International
laws and codes are under “tremendous strain”, Lammy said.
“We’re
realists, and must accept that we’re now living in a multipolar world. It’s a
world no longer where there’s just one superpower and the members of the [UN]
security council. And so, of course, the rule of law is under tremendous
strain. And we lose it, it seems to me, at our peril,” he said.
Lammy,
the former foreign secretary, has developed a friendship with Vance. Last year,
the vice-president and his family stayed with his counterpart during a holiday
last summer, culminating in an unlicensed fishing trip in Chevening, Kent.
The two
men were said to have bonded over their difficult upbringings as well as their
faith, with Lammy attending Mass in Washington at the vice-president’s
invitation in March 2025.
Lammy was
shuffled out of the Foreign Office in September to become justice secretary and
deputy prime minister after the resignation of Angela Rayner.
In his
role as the minister in charge of the justice system, Lammy is preparing to
confirm sweeping changes to the British courts which would results in the
cancellation of thousands of jury trials. The move has put him on a collision
course with rebel MPs who have criticised the move.
Karl
Turner, the MP for Kingston upon Hull East, told Times Radio that members of
the parliamentary Labour party (PLP) were “seething” with Starmer and Lammy
over the policy, and said the prime minister “ought to be ashamed of himself”.
“I’ve
said to the prime minister I want to see him face-to-face on this single issue
and I expect him to instruct Lammy to stop and think again,” Turner, a former
criminal barrister, said.

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