The White House is facing criticism after using Sabrina Carpenter's song "Juno" in a social media post that promoted federal immigration enforcement. The video was released across official social media accounts. It featured a montage of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrests, with Sabrina Carpenter's lyric "have you ever tried this one?" playing over the clips.The post's tone appeared to be partly sarcastic. It drew notable outrage from netizens and the singer's fans. Carpenter recently wrapped her Short n' Sweet Tour after more than a year on the road.The White House video referenced Sabrina Carpenter's now-viral on-stage bit from the Short n' Sweet tour, where she would demonstrate a new s*x position during the "Juno" moment at every stop. The administration's video allegedly framed ICE arrests as "positions".Has Sabrina Carpenter commented yet on the news?The Espresso singer has not yet commented on the government's use of her song. Notably, earlier in 2025, pop star Olivia Rodrigo publicly condemned DHS earlier this year for using her track "All-American Bitch" in a self-deportation post without her permission.Over recent months, DHS has repeatedly used popular music and content to promote deportation actions online. Country artist Zach Bryan objected when one of his songs appeared in a similar post. Moreover, Pokémon intervened when a DHS video used audio linked to the franchise.A September video featured comedian Theo Von's joke about deportation in an enforcement footage. However, Von later clarified he had not agreed to the usage. Each of these incidents has sparked debate online.Netizens are also outraged regarding The White House's use of Sabrina Carpenter's hit track. Many took to social media platforms like X (formerly Twitter) to pen their opinions. Below are some of their responses:"We have reached the point where immigration policy is being explained with TikTok s*x jokes, this timeline is cooked", commented a netizen."Sabrina Carpenter has shared that the song's concept emerged spontaneously during a songwriting session when she ad libbed the line make you wanna make me Juno inspired by watching the movie Juno. She later developed it into a full track, performing it on her tour with enthusiasm.", penned another."The White House Communications team needs to be put in a timeout. Comparing serious law enforcement actions to an explicit pop song is the definition of cringe. Did they fire the adult supervision", wrote a third.Sabrina Carpenter recently made headlines for a viral TikTok where she revealed backstage incidents from the Short n' Sweet tour, including the revelation that she never knew whether her mid-show shot was water or tequila. She also teased that she had "one last thing" to say before the clip cut out.The singer also made an emotional Instagram post to mark the end of her last touring cycle, stating:"this show really was everything I have dreamt of making since i was young. This combined with a literal house that became a home of a stage + working with the sweetest most talented hardworking souls every day, so much laughter and moments that felt straight out of a sitcom, has meant that i am feeling every bit of this ending and feeling it hard!"She also added:"every detail of this show was made with love, humor, creativity, and excitement for each crowd to step into my mind and our world for the evening, to hopefully go out for one night all dressed up however you’d like (which you nailed) and get out of your head while celebrating the good the bad, the funny and the sad!"Fans can keep an eye on Sabrina Carpenter's official pages for updates about that "one last thing" she teased.Also Read: "I'm really bad at it": Lindsay Lohan admits she is out of the loop on internet slang and trends"This time it's all about the truth": Internet erupts as Netflix drops official teaser for Diddy documentary, with 50 Cent as exec producer