John Oliver trotted out fellow comedian Mike Myers dressed as a Mountie, a dancing beaver, and a moose getting a colonoscopy to advise Canadians not to re-elect Stephen Harper.

The TV comic acknowledged he was willingly breaking an election law forbidding foreigners from influencing Canadian elections that comes with a $5,000 fine and six-month jail term to share it.

“Here’s your $5,000 Canada,” said Oliver, throwing $5,000 in Canadian bills into the air during Sunday’s taping of “Last Week Tonight.”

He offered a recap on the campaign, noting former Conservative candidate Jerry Bance’s urinated into a mug (which Oliver compared to Canadian beer) and NDP candidate Alex Johnstone’s phallic Auschwitz joke (which he used to ridicule her background on a school board).

He ridiculed NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair as resembling actor “Paul Giamatti’s uncle reading a rhyming dictionary.”

He likened Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau’s appearance to that of a 90s boy band member just before checking into rehab and “Johnny Depp’s evil twin.”

His harshest barbs were directed at Conservative leader Stephen Harper, comparing him to the girl-next-door with a jerk boyfriend. He played a video of Harper speaking, and compared him to an alien trying to appear human.

He questioned whether Harper was "high'' for calling marijuana more dangerous than tobacco.

Oliver seemed to strike a more serious note at times.

“Where there’s banality there’s evil,” he said, blasting the Conservatives for what he called a fixation on the niqab ban.

“She should be allowed to wear whatever the f*** she wants,” he said of a Muslim woman.

“You think I’m scared of six months in Canadian prison?,” Oliver added. “What’s that? Six months of living in Ottawa?”

The good news, for Oliver: he need not fear being sent to the slammer. The law he made fun of is actually not all that different from the U.S. ban on foreign political donations, although that country’s politics has hundreds of millions of harder-to-track dollars sloshing around in political-action committees.

Canadian elections authorities explained Monday that there’s no law against foreigners expressing an opinion. They said the legal provision in question — section 331 of the Canada Elections Act — has been on the books since the 1920s and it doesn’t cover people stating their view.

“The expression of personal political views by Canadians or non-Canadians as to which parties or candidates they support is not an offence under the Act,” said Elections Canada spokesman John Enright.

“This also applies to Mr. Oliver.”

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He said the key provision refers to people who “induce” Canadians: “To induce there must be a tangible thing offered. A personal view is not inducement,” he added.

Before he got to the politicians, Oliver began with the country: “Canada,” Oliver said, opening the segment. “The country you think about so little, that’s it. End of sentence.”

Given that U.S. elections last two years, he teased a CBC host’s reference to the two-and-a-half-month campaign as historically long: “Thinking 78 days is a long campaign is absolutely adorable. It’s like the woman who has only ever seen one penis saying, ‘That’s the longest one ever. There couldn’t possibly be one longer than that.’”