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SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE -- "Kristen Stewart" Episode 1717 -- Pictured: (l-r) Alec Baldwin as President Donald J. Trump, Mikey Day as advisor Steve Bannon during the Oval Office Cold Open on February 4th, 2017 -- (Photo by: Will Heath/NBC) Image Credit: AP

Alec Baldwin doesn’t expect to take his impression of President Trump from Saturday Night Live to the annual White House Correspondents’ Association dinner next month.

Trump announced on Twitter last month that he wouldn’t be attending the fundraiser for college scholarships and venue for reporting awards, and a host hasn’t yet been named. That’s led to speculation that Baldwin could host the April 29 event in character — but the 58-year-old actor doesn’t see it happening.

“I think the White House Correspondents’ people will probably not ask me to do Trump if I had to bet,” he said on Monday. “I wouldn’t be surprised if they determined that me doing that there is not in their interests. Maybe him not coming — if he doesn’t come — the idea is let’s send him up, but let’s not send him up in effigy and have some impostor come.”

WHCA President Jeff Mason said on Tuesday that the organisation had no comment on the Baldwin’s remarks and no update on who might host the dinner.

Baldwin, who was promoting his role voicing the titular character in the animated The Boss Baby, also said he was concerned about the impact of his much-discussed impression.

“Doing the Trump character — it’s not that it’s not fun, but... behind it and underneath there’s a constant sense of — are we sending this up and are we making something funny to the detriment of a serious conversation about what’s going on in the country?” he said.

The WHCA dinner mixes politicians, journalists and celebrities and is typically attended by the president and first lady. Remarks by a comedian, often roasting the president, and a humorous address by the president himself, often roasting the press and political opponents, have highlighted the event, which C-SPAN has carried live.

Separately, Baldwin told Extra that he said he may stop doing the impression on SNL as well. “I’m not going to do it much longer, the impersonation, I don’t know how much more people can take it,” Baldwin told the show.