Hip-Hop has infiltrated the US Congress. On October 21 Republican Congressman Bill Posey ended his floor speech with โLetโs Go Brandonโโa censored version of an anti-Biden chant that has gone viral in part because of Greensboro rapper Bryson Gray.
House Representative Poseyโs dig at President Biden is closely tied to his opposition to Bidenโs Build Back Better economic agendaโan initiative designed to help create jobs in America, according to Space Coast Daily and The White House.
“Based on the false promise that he would unify America, President Biden got into the Oval Office,” the congressman said. “And my friends on the other side of the aisle gained a razor-thin majority in the House and Senate.โ The republican congressman continued to admonish President Biden and his initiative, concluding his speech with โput America back where you found it and leave it the hell alone. Let’s go, Brandon!”
What makes Congressman Posey saying โLetโs Go Brandonโ so controversial is because of what the catchphraseโand song title of rapper Bryson Gray’s latest hitโ now represents. Gray’s rap song “Let’s Go Brandon” expresses many anti-Biden sentiments and includes much medical misinformation, according to Yahoo News.
The misinformation in Grayโs song was so excessive that it sparked action from YouTube, resulting in YouTube removing Grayโs video from their platform on October 21. Upset by the removal of his video from YouTube, Gray took to Twitter to vent his disbelief that same day.
“YouTube has banned โLetโs Go Brandonโ song from YouTube due to โmedical information,โ Gray posted on Twitter. “What medical misinformation is in the song? Whoa.” Although Gray’s video was removed, it was re-uploaded by another YouTube user on October 21.
Gray’s “Let’s Go Brandon” is the second version of it’s kind, deriving inspiration from Las Vegas rapper Loza Alexander’s song by the same name.
Alexanderโs “Let’s Go Brandon” song, which includes the chant โf**k Joe Biden in itโs background production, has become the go-to anthem for those displeased with President Bidenโs leadership. Shortly after the release of his song, Alexander skyrocketed to the number one spot on iTunes hip-hop chart, according to KLAS 8 News Now.
Wearing a โMake Music Great Againโ hat in his music video for โLetโs Go Brandon,โ a play off of โMake America Great Again,โ Alexander gave his reasons for being anti-Biden through his rap. Alexander also incorporated the viral NASCAR memeโorigin of the โLetโs Go Brandonโ mantraโas the background in his music video.
In the popular NASCAR meme video, during a post-interview with NASCAR driver Brandon Brown after he won the 2021 Talladega Xfinity Series, fans kept chanting โf**k Joe Biden,โ prompting the interviewer to rephrase what the crowd were saying as โLetโs Go Brandon.โ Most likely to refocus viewers attention back to Brandon Brown, and away from the loud โf**k Joe Bidenโ chant in the background of the on-camera interview.
While republican rappers may be having their moment right now, non-republican rappers had the same moment during Donald Trump’s presidency. Back in 2016, shortly after Donald Trump was elected into office, Compton rapper YG released an anti-Trump single titled “FDT (F**k Donald Trump).”