'SNL' mocked Republican lawmakers' undying devotion to Trump in a 'Meet the Press' cold open

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'SNL' mocked Republican lawmakers' undying devotion to Trump in a 'Meet the Press' cold open

snl cold open May 12

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  • "SNL" opened Saturday night's episode with a fake scene from "Meet the Press."
  • In the sketch, Republican lawmakers responded to a series of hypothetical scenarios, answering whether or not a certain action by President Donald Trump would make them give up their support for the president.
  • Despite the proposed ridiculous scenarios, nothing seemed to inspire a change in heart for the lawmakers.
  • Read more stories like this on the Business Insider homepage.

"Saturday Night Live" skewered Republican lawmakers in the cold open of its pre-Mothers Day show.

In a faux episode of "Meet the Press," actors playing Senators Lindsey Grahm (Kate Mckinnon), Susan Collins (Cecily Strong), and Mitch McConnell (Beck Bennett) repeatedly expressed devotion to President Donald Trump in the face a series of increasingly incriminating and negative questions from Chuck Todd (Kyle Mooney).

The topic of discussion was "what would it take for President Trump to lose your support?"

Neither hypothetical collusion or obstruction seemed to move 'Grahm' or 'McConnell.' 'Collins' said she would write "a strongly worded email and send it straight to my drafts folder."

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Read more: No sitting president has survived a serious primary challenge in the past 50 years. Here's why Trump should be worried.

The group balked at the possibility that Trump was a Muslim, a jab at the conspiracy theory that followed former president Barack Obama, but conceded that it would be fine as long as they still got their tax cuts.

The group became furious at the proposal that Trump would divorce Melania Trump and marry Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, but still maintained that they would support Trump.

The sketch comes at an apt time, just days after an NBC poll showed that 90% of Republicans approve of the job Trump is doing as president and as Trump kicks his re-election campaign into high gear.

Despite continued controversies around the Trump administration, few Republican lawmakers have openly spoken against Trump. Former Massachusetts governor Bill Weld is the only Republican who has announced that they will challenge Trump for the Republican nomination.

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