Sean Delonas is an American
political cartoonist and author whose work was for 23 years published by the New York Post as part of their
Page Six content. His cartoons are currently syndicated worldwide by Cagle Cartoons.
A number of his cartoons have been criticized as "racist, offensive, and misleading."[5] His work has been criticized as "ham-handed",[6] and he has been accused of "churning out malevolent fantasies."[7] He has been called "the worst cartoonist on the planet" by Vanity Fair, which also asked if he was "stupid, racist, or both?"[8] Conversely, Commentary also praised his irreverent visual imagination, and described as "a bizarre cross between
Jack Davis of Mad Magazine and
Hieronymous Bosch."[9]
A 1999 cartoon depicted
Louis Farrakhan about to undergo surgery for recently diagnosed cancer, with the surgeons preparing to cut through his neck to remove "the cancerous tumor from Farrakhan's body."[10] A 2001 cartoon showing rival editor
Mortimer B. Zuckerman of the New York Daily News sending
anthrax to Post editor
Col Allan led to sponsor withdrawal.[11]
After a photoshopped picture of the
Sesame Street muppet
Bert standing alongside
Osama bin Laden went viral when it turned up on a pro-Osama placard, the website which included it (
Bert is Evil) was taken down. Referencing this, in the Post, Delonas did a series of depictions of Bert instructing and training
Taliban and
Al Qaida terrorists.[citation needed]
In 2009, two days after a local
chimpanzee mauling[12] and one day after legislation was signed into law by President
Barack Obama,[13] Delonas depicted two white police officers who just shot and killed a
chimpanzee. One officer says, "They'll have to find someone else to write the next
stimulus bill." The cartoon was widely criticized as in bad taste[14] and as making a reference to the racial slur of African Americans being portrayed as apes. Protests came from journalists,[15][16][17][18] politicians,[19][20] police groups,[21][22] and the public.[23][24] The Post disputed this interpretation and defended Delonas.[25]
In 2018, the Albuquerque Journal apologized for publishing a cartoon by Delonas which equated
MS-13 gang members with
Dreamers. The cartoon was widely criticized, including by both U.S. senators from New Mexico.[5][26][27][28]