Dave Chappelle Calls Out Lauren Boebert For Exploiting His Good Faith For Political Gain

In a conversation with NPR’s Steve Inskeep for the network’s Newsmakers program, stand-up comedian Dave Chappelle addressed two related topics that clearly got under his skin: the Republican Party’s use of transgender humor as a political tool and a specific encounter with Colorado Congresswoman Lauren Boebert that he says crossed a line.

Chappelle was direct about how he felt when he saw the GOP adopt the kind of material he had been doing on stage. “I did resent that the Republican party ran on transgender jokes,” he told Inskeep. “I felt like they were doing a weaponized version of what I was doing. It’s not what I was doing.”

For Chappelle, there is a meaningful difference between a comedian working through difficult material in front of a live audience and a political party deploying that same material as a campaign strategy. The comedian does not appear to consider the two comparable.

The more personal grievance involved Boebert. Chappelle described a visit to Capitol Hill where members of Congress from multiple offices lined up to take photos with him. He said he did not ask how anyone voted or what their record was before agreeing to pictures. What followed, he says, was a lesson he did not expect.

“Here comes Lauren Boebert,” he said. “She said, ‘Can I get a picture?’ I’d already taken 40 pictures. I didn’t want to say no in front of everybody, but I didn’t know the phrase ‘I respectfully decline,’ so I just took the picture. And then she posts a picture before I could even get from there to the show and says something to the effect of just two people that knew. It’s just too generous. She instantly weaponized it, or politicized it.”

Chappelle said his response was immediate. “I got to the arena and I lit her up for doing that. She should never do that to a person like me.”

He framed his objection not as a political statement but as a matter of personal boundaries and good faith. “You do whatever it is you do,” he said, “but don’t get me out of the splash zone of your…”

Chappelle takes the photograph in good faith, and in his view, Boebert used his image to suggest an alignment or endorsement that was never offered. He treats that as a violation of trust, one he addressed publicly from the stage the same night it happened.