It’s hard to believe that on Saturday, Donald Trump will have been in office for 100 days. As Stephen Colbert put it on Monday’s Late Show, “it sure seems longer.”

Late-night has reveled in picking apart Trump’s every move since he took office. So it’s no surprise that as the president approaches this traditional milestone, Colbert and Seth Meyers would take it upon themselves to give him a report card of sorts. Equally unsurprising? They both basically flunked him.

“The first 100 days are traditionally a time to reflect on accomplishments of a president, and Trump hasn’t got a lot of those,” Colbert said. “He still hasn’t filled his cabinet; he didn’t repeal Obamacare; there are still Muslims.”

As of Monday, this week became a critical time not only for the president, but also for late-night; the W.G.A. overwhelmingly voted to authorize a strike, which could send Colbert and his fellow late-night hosts straight into reruns. Evidently, Colbert and his fellow hosts are still making hay while they can. Hosts on Monday night particularly honed in on the potential government shutdown: if Congress doesn’t send Trump a government funding bill to be approved by midnight Friday, the government could stop in its tracks. As some have noted, that would make Trump the first president in history to have a shutdown on his hands within his first 100 days.

“We may have a government shutdown if Congress doesn’t pass a budget,” Colbert said Monday night. “And Trump is so desperate to have something to show for his first 100 days that he just threw in funding for the border wall—which may kill the bill and make the United States financially insolvent. So, Trump really is running the country like one of his businesses.”

On Late Night, Meyers also honed in on the possible government shutdown. “If this were a movie, it would be called 100 Dayz and Confused,” Meyers quipped, adding later, “Are we sure the government wasn’t shut down already? Because it was reported recently that President Trump has appointed fewer than three-dozen of the top 1,000 officials he needs to run the federal government. Under Trump, our federal government is staffed as well as a Duane Reade on a Sunday morning.”