lectoral campaigns for the are in their final stages, and candidates from the two dominant political parties are intensifying their messages by any means necessary. The Democrats and played an important and irreverent card on . On the night of Saturday, November 2, three days before the , made a surprise appearance in the first sketch of the episode broadcast by .

Kamala meets Kamala Comedian Maya Rudolph, who plays Kamala Harris, looks exhausted by the grueling presidential campaign, which she assumed after Joe Biden withdrew from his aspirations to stay in the White House. When Rudolph mentions that she would like to speak to a middle-aged African-American woman of Asian descent who is running for president, probably from the Bay Area, Kamala Harris appeared to interact with Rudolph, to great applause from those gathered in the NBC studios. "You can do something your opponent can't do, you can open doors," the current vice president told the actress in charge of impersonating her for the show, which has been around for 50 years.

"I'll tell you what, I'm voting for both," Rudolph said, before the two gave the usual welcome to the comedy show that Saturday after Saturday keeps Americans on television. Harris has garnered the support of a large part of the artistic community in the United States. Personalities such as Taylor Swift, Jennifer Lopez, Mark Hamill, Beyonce, Bruce Springsteen and several others have publicly expressed their support for the Democratic candidate.

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