Back to Articles
Is Richard Tice’s Picture AI-manipulated? Here Are Five Giveaways

The Guardian

ENRICHED

Details

Date Published
20 Apr 2026
Priority Score
1
Australian
No
Created
20 Apr 2026, 08:00 pm

Authors (1)

Description

Experts and social media detectives take a closer look at Reform deputy leader’s image of an apparent campaign event

Summary

This article examines the prevalence of AI-generated or manipulated promotional images in political campaigning, focusing on a specific instance involving Reform UK deputy leader Richard Tice. It identifies common 'hallucination' markers such as mangled limbs, garbled text, and geometric inconsistencies that characterize low-fidelity frontier AI image generation. While the content highlights the risks of misinformation and the erosion of digital trust during elections, it addresses superficial political manipulation rather than existential or catastrophic risks to humanity. The discussion serves as a case study for the urgent need for robust provenance standards and AI watermarking in global governance frameworks to mitigate democratic destabilization.

Body

After Tice posted this picture on Sunday, X users lined up to ask whether the image was legitimate or ‘pure AI slop’. Illustration: @TiceRichardView image in fullscreenAfter Tice posted this picture on Sunday, X users lined up to ask whether the image was legitimate or ‘pure AI slop’. Illustration: @TiceRichardIs Richard Tice’s picture AI-manipulated? Here are five giveawaysExperts and social media detectives take a closer look at Reform deputy leader’s image of an apparent campaign event View image in fullscreenAI manipulated image of Reform UK supporters as posted by Richard Tice. Illustration: @TiceRichardAfter Richard Tice posted a picture of an apparent Reform campaign event on Sunday, experts and social media detectives took a closer look and concluded from a variety of telltale signs that the image had either been edited or generated by artificial intelligence. Here are some of the elements that critics called into question.1. Mangled fingersView image in fullscreenOn closer inspection, one woman has six fingers on one hand. One woman has six fingers on one hand and extra long ones on the other. The man in the beige jacket has three extremely long fingers which look like sausages. AI often gets fingers wrong.2. Garbled signsView image in fullscreenThe signs are supposed to read ‘Get Starmer Out’.The signs are supposed to read “Get Starmer Out” but the text reads more like “Get Stuppence out”. The Reform arrow on many of them is also wonky. AI image programs often struggle with generating or editing text.3. Blurred facesView image in fullscreenLots of the faces of the campaigners appear smeared and blurred.Lots of the faces of the campaigners appear smeared and blurred, with one man appearing to have closed, wonky eyes.4. Perfect lines and geometric patternsView image in fullscreenThe concrete pattern is perfectly geometric, which is a sign of AI, say experts. The pixel-perfect vertical lines on the railings are suspicious, and if you zoom in on the concrete you can see the pattern is perfectly geometric, which is a sign of AI.5. Mysteriously floating objectsView image in fullscreenThe man in the white jacket does not appear to be holding his sign.The man in the red T-shirt and white jacket does not appear to be holding his “Get Stuppence Out” sign, instead it is floating in front of him.Reform UK has denied the picture is AI-generated. A spokesperson said: “The photograph is real, however the version Richard Tice posted was slightly edited using AI, mainly to increase the brightness.”Read more on this story here