The Palm Beach Post

Donald Trump on ‘SNL’? This race already is a joke

- She writes for the Kansas City Star.

Mary Sanchez

This is how far American politics have disintegra­ted.

We’re arguing over whether a presidenti­al candidate, a man leading in the polls not because of leadership qualities but because he’s a master at courting the worst of nativist America, should be barred from hosting “Saturday Night Live.” Am I living in a sitcom? The decline of political discourse is being livetweete­d. And it’s about to usher in huge advertisin­g dollars for NBC.

Despite pushback from some quarters, Donald Trump will host “SNL” on Nov. 7. NBC is merely lining up to slice off a little share of the mania the Republican Party has wrought. Don’t expect a change of heart from the show’s executives. They are not impressed by complaints that Trump is courting xenophobia and bigotry with his sweeping generaliza­tions casting Mexicans as rapists and drug dealers.

Nearly 140,000 have signed a petition sponsored by MoveOn.org asking the network to reconsider. Don’t expect NBC to cave; nor will it be shaken by U.S. Rep. Luis Gutier- rez’s warning in a letter to the network and to Comcast that Trump’s hosting will be “a huge corporate blunder.”

The problem is that it won’t be. People will eat it up. He is ratings gold.

Yet a politician’s duty is not to entertain. The greatest leaders of the past are not remembered for their flashy wardrobes or their ease at the podium. They steadied the nation’s soul in times of war, understood the delicate methods of diplomacy, correctly analyzed still-developing economic threats and made tough calls on backing voting and civil rights when others pressed for stagnation, not progress.

But we’ve lost sight of this.

Trump alone is not the danger. It’s the fact that he is electrifyi­ng a portion of America that is stuck longing for the past and scared of the future. They are people who are unnerved by the changing demographi­cs of the country.

By 2023, Latinos will be about 30 percent of all schoolchil­dren. Immigrants launched nearly 30 percent of the nation’s new businesses in 2014. Those two statistics should tell you something: Immigrants are a huge part of America’s economic vitality, and their role in future economic growth and innovation will be key.

Trump’s nativist supporters know that the shifts in the population are unstoppabl­e. What they don’t know is that they have nothing to lose and much to gain from fully integratin­g every American and every immigrant into the economy. But instead of addressing the complexiti­es of immigratio­n reform and the competitiv­eness of a global workplace, Trump feeds off of people’s fears like a parasite.

His crazy ideas to solve illegal immigratio­n with a giant wall and familydest­roying mass deportatio­ns are affronts to morality and common sense. Even a confirmed cynic cannot believe that Americans would be foolish enough to elect this clown president.

In the meantime, he will continue to press America’s panic buttons and troll the Washington establishm­ent. He’s having the time of his life, getting even with the media snobs who laughed at him for so long while legions of people he considers losers rush to join his bandwagon.

The joke is on America.

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