Larry Wilmore really likes Bernie Sanders, is OK with Hillary Clinton and finds Donald Trump “interesting” in the coded language of a comedian-journalist of the liberal persuasion attempting to maintain a veneer of nonpartisan neutrality.

But when it comes to William Jefferson Clinton — whom he quarter-jokingly referred to as a “super-predator” on the “Nightly Show” recently — whoa.


“As president of the United States, he decided it was a good thing to fool around with a 22-year-old staffer [Monica Lewinsky] in the White House,” a stone-serious Wilmore, the keynote speaker of this weekend’s White House Correspondents Dinner told me during an (otherwise light) interview for POLITICO’s “Off Message” podcast.

“It was predatory behavior, you know,” added Wilmore, who grew up in a Roman Catholic family outside of Los Angeles. “I really supported the Clintons politically, but that really bugged me, that whole Clinton thing. … [I]t [still] does, because it's not — even though they both said it was consensual, you're the president of the United States. That's the workplace. You know, that's a young girl. Come on, man. You've got a young daughter. Come on, you don’t gotta do that. That's not right.”

Wilmore, a low-key 54-year-old writer, comedian and actor, couldn’t be more different than the man he replaced at the Comedy Central late desk, Stephen Colbert, who famously lit up George W. Bush at the 2006 dinner. That roast, which spurred walkouts from aghast Republicans, prompted event organizers to opt for less incendiary speakers like, well, Wilmore.

If Colbert cloaked his progressive worldview behind a faux-conservative suit and tie, Wilmore doesn’t pretend to be anyone other than himself; His comedy comes with an unmistakable moral edge: It colors and sometimes overshadows a professional funnyman’s imperative to be hilarious, as his grudge against the 42nd president proves.

Wilmore’s parents, who moved from Evanston, Illinois, to Pomona, California, when he was kid, remain a significant influence. His father, who worked as an L.A. County probation officer until his late 30s, decided — after determining he was bored working at a camp for young offenders — to become a doctor, and willed himself through medical school while working. ("I saw a "Gray's Anatomy" book on his table and I said, 'What are you doing?' And he said, 'You know, I think I'm going to change what I'm doing'").

Wilmore was class president of a nearly all-white Catholic school — a position, he joked, that will make him feel right at home at Saturday night’s largely monochromatic dinner.

The WHCA podium has become a consequential perch for “serious” comedians in recent years. It can accelerate a rising career (Colbert, Seth Meyers), lend gravitas to a lighter-weight host (Joel McHale), or expose the fault lines between entertainment and politics.

The pressure not to bomb is intense (A couple of years back, I stood backstage with McHale, nerves ajangle, as he paced back and forth reading his jokes aloud out of a tiny loose-leaf notebook filled with laminated joke pages). So most hosts affect a carefree I-got-here-by-accident attitude.

Not Wilmore. He’s got the guts to admit he’s pushed for it since performing a well-received set at the Congressional Correspondents Dinner a few years back, when he was Jon Stewart's “senior black correspondent” on "The Daily Show." “I call it ‘throwing it out there’ — that I really wanted to do this, you know, not knowing if I'd have a chance to do it or be in the position and do it, but really hoping that I would,” he told me during a sitdown in Manhattan last week as he was prepping his final set with a team of writers from his show.

When I ask him why he wanted the gig so much, he says “I don’t know,” then pauses. “I guess it was something that I felt would be a cool thing to have done, especially to do it for President Obama, first black president, the significance of him in that office, and I just wanted to be able to have a chance to do that.”

Wilmore isn’t shy about confronting racial topics on his show (one of the funniest recent segments was a focus group with a handful of black Trump supporters that ended with him asking them how they had lost their minds), and he offers the bluntest possible explanation for his blanket Obamaphilia.

“Well, I always said I'm not disappointed with Obama because I voted for him because he was black, and as long as he kept being black, I was a happy man,” he said.

Wilmore then relates the following semi-made-up conversation:

"‘Well, Larry, what about Obama’s foreign policy?’

"‘Is he still black?’

"‘Yes.’

"‘Then, I have no problem. I am good.’”

Wilmore says he’ll make his share of Obama jokes and Clinton jokes, but his target of choice is — duh — Trump. He hasn’t talked to Colbert about the speech, but (as of the taping) he planned to quiz Meyers, whose performance he considered to be the gold standard.

He especially loved Meyers’ signature joke, delivered to Trump’s disapproving chin-jutted scowl, that the only “blacks” who really like him are a “family of white people” named the Blacks.

“His assault on Trump was hilarious,” says Wilmore who has tried — thus far unsuccessfully — to woo the billionaire developer onto his show. “It was so funny. They kept cutting to Trump, and his reaction was just hilarious. I mean, Trump's face was just — it kept getting funnier and funnier and funnier.”

As he professes to view 2016 as an endless tanker train of comic fuel, Wilmore is worried by the danger he says Trump poses; one of his earliest Trump bits featured him grilling his writers for jokes — and each one giving up, saying the reality star’s rise wasn’t funny.

Moreover, he’s not buying Democratic self-talk that Trump will be a pushover in November — and thinks a lot of voters might opt for an alternative out of sheer Clinton fatigue.

“Hillary is already a known factor to people; there's nothing, like, new about her, and I think ‘new’ means something when you're running for president,” he said.

“It's like the Clintons are coming back into the neighborhood, and there's something about that. And I'm not even judging it on a political level. I'm just judging on just the purest human level.

“There's something about a new family moving into the White House that's kind of interesting, even if you didn't vote for them,” he said referring to the Trump clan.