Supergirl was, is, and always will be the most 'politically driven' of the DCW series, and there's nothing wrong with that, because the political undertones and 'social commentary' narrative elements have been, at least for me, among the better parts of the show through its first 35 episodes. Tonight's episode so blatantly pushing back against the concept of forced deportation, coupled with Snapper's mention of a "fascist President", gave me everything that I want from this show as far as 'political commentary' is concerned, while also delivering a really great Sci-Fi-based story in and of itself.
Yeah, I'm surprised at how timely this was. The immigration crackdown started just a few weeks ago, but this episode must've been written at least a couple of months ago, before the inauguration. Sure, we all knew that the incoming administration's campaign was rooted in anti-immigrant fearmongering -- we knew that last year when Supergirl had Senator Crane talk about building a dome to keep the aliens out -- but there's a degree of serendipity in the timing of when it came out.
Although since Olivia Marsdin is apparently in her second term on Earth-38, it doesn't seem their United States has any experience with a potential fascist becoming president, so I wonder if Snapper's line really makes sense in-universe. Well, maybe Lex Luthor mounted a presidential campaign at one point.
The only thing I was kind of surprised by is that she seemed to buy Supergirl's explanation about how she suddenly showed up outside L Corp, but only because I feel like Lena is eventually going to learn that Kara and Supergirl are one and the same and the show might not get a better opportunity to make that reveal than they gave themselves tonight.
I don't know why Supergirl even needed an excuse. She could've just said she was patrolling the city and happened to be nearby.
I do wish they'd had Kara be physically weaker, though, since it would've been a nice callback to the fact that she can in fact lose her powers if she's put under too much strain/has to exert an intense amount of effort.
That's only been established with the Solar Flare, where she drains all her accumulated solar energy through heat vision. I don't think it's been asserted as a consequence of extreme muscular exertion (or whatever the underlying mechanism of her flight propulsion is).
I also found it kind of curious that it didn't seem to take long for Hatcher and Sorbo's characters, the King and Queen, to begin feeling the effects of Earth's yellow sun on their bodies as opposed to what happened with Mon-El, but maybe that's a function of the fact that he spent so many years stuck in a Kryptonian pod in the Well of Stars.
Or maybe it's because they're getting the intense, raw, full-spectrum sunlight of outer space, while what we get on Earth is filtered and weakened by the atmosphere. So they're getting a more potent dose, especially of ultraviolet, so it's charging their cells more quickly.
If @Christopher hadn't pointed it out, I wouldn't have remembered/realized that Kara's comment to Mon-El that "Supergirl is what I can do; Kara is who I am" was a paraphrased reprise of something from Lois and Clark, but I think it makes far more sense coming from Kara, especially as she's characterized in this show, than it does coming from Clark (even Dean Cain's Clark), since it's an affirmation of something that I've repeated in the past, which is that Kara doesn't actually technically have a 'secret identity' so much as she has three separate but interconnected identities that help define who she is.
I see it the other way around. "Superman is what I can do; Clark is who I am" is a perfect summation of how the L&C character was written. That version was based on John Byrne's version from the post-Crisis reboot, which reversed the traditional approach of depicting Clark Kent as merely a facade that Superman adopted to conceal his identity and instead made Clark the real personality, with Superman as the facade to enable him to use his powers without compromising his ability to lead a normal life as Clark. In context, Lois had just learned that Clark was Superman (the famous "Duh" scene where the evil Tempus mocks her for not seeing through the glasses) and she's furious at him for lying to her, thinking that Clark is just a persona Superman fabricated. Clark is trying to assure her that the person she's gotten to know and fallen in love with is who he really is, that it's Superman that's the false persona.
With Kara, it's different. Supergirl is more than just what she can do. The whole point of the first season is that embracing what she could do rather than hiding it was a key part of embracing who she was, that they were a single whole. Becoming Supergirl was becoming her true self, which is why she (until recently) spent the majority of each episode as Supergirl rather than in civilian mode. So I'm not sure that line really works for her.