"Republican Healthcare Plan? What Republican Healthcare Plan?"
The ongoing US government shutdown has sparked ridicule and skepticism from late-night talk show hosts Jimmy Kimmel, Stephen Colbert, and Seth Meyers. The trio poked fun at President Trump's attempts to spin the crisis and even claimed that there is no comprehensive Republican plan for healthcare.
In a satirical take on Trump's meeting with Japan's Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, Kimmel quipped: "The guy who's ended eight wars... can't do anything about this?" referring to his inability to pass meaningful legislation. The comedian also pointed out that even far-right members of Congress are at odds over healthcare reform.
Colbert took a more biting approach, suggesting that Japan was trying to escape Trump's economic tantrums by gifting him with fireworks and cherry trees. He then mocked Trump's claim that he wanted to use the military to "invade America" and pointed out that his own generals would be hesitant to follow such an order.
Meanwhile, Meyers began with a tongue-in-cheek remark about Trump's claimed polling numbers, joking that he might have been shown fake news by the people around him. The comedian also roasted Trump's decision to host a Halloween celebration at the White House, poking fun at his pale complexion and suggesting that even Robert F. Kennedy Jr. would look more tanned.
Throughout their monologues, the hosts cleverly skewered Trump's antics while highlighting the absurdity of the government shutdown. As Kimmel so aptly put it: "The reason Mike Johnson won't share the plan for healthcare is because they do not exist."
The ongoing US government shutdown has sparked ridicule and skepticism from late-night talk show hosts Jimmy Kimmel, Stephen Colbert, and Seth Meyers. The trio poked fun at President Trump's attempts to spin the crisis and even claimed that there is no comprehensive Republican plan for healthcare.
In a satirical take on Trump's meeting with Japan's Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, Kimmel quipped: "The guy who's ended eight wars... can't do anything about this?" referring to his inability to pass meaningful legislation. The comedian also pointed out that even far-right members of Congress are at odds over healthcare reform.
Colbert took a more biting approach, suggesting that Japan was trying to escape Trump's economic tantrums by gifting him with fireworks and cherry trees. He then mocked Trump's claim that he wanted to use the military to "invade America" and pointed out that his own generals would be hesitant to follow such an order.
Meanwhile, Meyers began with a tongue-in-cheek remark about Trump's claimed polling numbers, joking that he might have been shown fake news by the people around him. The comedian also roasted Trump's decision to host a Halloween celebration at the White House, poking fun at his pale complexion and suggesting that even Robert F. Kennedy Jr. would look more tanned.
Throughout their monologues, the hosts cleverly skewered Trump's antics while highlighting the absurdity of the government shutdown. As Kimmel so aptly put it: "The reason Mike Johnson won't share the plan for healthcare is because they do not exist."