The Denver Post

DACA: Late-night comics strain for humor

- By Rachel Siegel NBC

On his program Tuesday night, Jimmy Kimmel said President Donald Trump must have awakened that morning and asked, “What’s something horrible I can do to distract people from the Russia investigat­ion?”

“Someone said, ‘You know, there are 800,000 innocent kids you can deport for no good reason!’ ” Kimmel then said.

Pundits and politician­s alike spent much of the day on Tuesday unpacking Trump’s decision to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.

And then it was time for late-night comedy, though for some comics, there was nothing funny to say and they opted for seriousnes­s, an increasing tendency since the conflict in Charlottes­ville, Va., last month.

From “Late Night With Seth Meyers” to “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert,” hosts leaned on their refined Trump imitations to paint the picture of an

Eadministr­ation no better at managing a natural disaster such as Hurricane Harvey than at preventing what Colbert dubbed the “man-made disaster unfolding in Washington right now” — the end of DACA.

Pivoting off Trump’s appearance­s in storm-ravaged Texas, comedians used stories of undocument­ed first responders as examples of those at risk of deportatio­n.

They mocked Trump for delegating the announceme­nt to Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and took note of the fact that two of

ETrump’s wives also immigrated to this country.

“Ultimately Donald Trump believes if these kids want to be American, then they have to do it the right way,” Kimmel said. “By marrying Donald Trump!”

The monologue included a spoof television commercial claiming Trump’s three oldest children were hard-working “dreamers” who couldn’t help that they were born to a mother who emigrated from Eastern Europe.

“Tell Congress to protect these children of immigrants, no matter how terrible their parents are,” said a serious, albeit spooky narrator.

Colbert said the administra­tion’s decision had Trump “in some deep DACA.” Footage of the news conference in which Sessions announced the end of the program included the attorney general saying the move “does not mean they are bad people or that our nation disrespect­s or demeans them in any way.”

“You’re right, Jeff,” Colbert quipped. “Deporting innocent children does not mean they’re bad people. It means you’re a bad person.”

On “The Daily Show,” Trevor Noah was also quick to note that the young people protected by DACA had no say in being brought to the U.S. illegally by their parents.

“It’s their parents, it’s not like it was their choice,” Noah said as a photo of a young boy appeared on the screen. Assuming the voice of a young child, Noah said, “No, Mama, you go on without me.”

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