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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
Politics
Sean Morrison

Watch Boris Johnson recreate Love Actually doorstep scene for General Election campaign video

Boris Johnson has replicated a memorable scene from the festive film Love Actually for a campaign video as he urged voters to back the Conservatives at the election.

The Prime Minister starred in the election broadcast as one of the hit movie’s hopeless romantics, putting a Brexit twist on the scene in which a man uses a series of placards to tell a woman he loves her.

Mr Johnson is seen in the video approaching an apathetic voter on her doorstep and silently showing her a series of messages after pretending to be a group of carol singers.

In the Conservative Party’s footage, which recreated a scene originally featuring Andrew Lincoln and Keira Knightley, two of the placards read: "With any luck, by next year we'll have Brexit done (if Parliament doesn't block it again)."

Boris Johnson replicated a scene from Love Actually in a campaign video for the Conservative Party (PA)

Jeremy Corbyn also launched a pop culture-inspired campaign video on Monday night as the run up to the General Election on Thursday entered its final stages.

In a video entitled "Mean Tweets with Jeremy Corbyn", the Labour leader read out critical tweets about him in a format popularised by US late-night chat host Jimmy Kimmel.

Mr Corbyn can been seen sitting by a fireplace as he reads read out the tweets.

Responding to one, he replied: "What is a commie hat? I wear a cap! It's a bit like when I was told I was riding a Maoist bicycle. It's a bicycle!"

After addressing Labour manifesto promises on broadband and tuition fees, he read out a tweet about being found sexy. "Oh this is bad," Mr Corbyn said, later telling viewers there was a magic money tree "in the Cayman Islands".

The Labour leader ended the video with a high-five to someone off-camera and saying he would be the next prime minister.

Boris Johnson holds a placard reading 'We'll have Brexit done' in a pop-culture inspired campaign video (PA)

Mr Johnson's video comes after Labour candidate for Tooting Rosena Allin-Khan posted her own campaign video "Election Actually" on November 22.

Less than half an hour after the campaign video had been launched, Dr Allin-Khan tweeted to say the Prime Minister had copied her spoof.

She wrote: "I won't be retweeting it - but Boris Johnson has copied my #ElectionActually video. Tanks. On. The. Lawn."

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