The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Republican­s push Kanye 2020. But will it really hurt Biden?

- By Will Weissert

WASHINGTON » Kanye West’s unlikely White House bid is getting help qualifying for presidenti­al ballots in key states from Republican­s around the country, fueling suspicions he’s being pushed to run by allies of President Donald Trump hoping to siphon support away from Joe Biden.

The rapper qualified for Colorado’s presidenti­al ballot on Thursday, after the Secretary of State’s office verified that nine electors he submitted are all registered to vote in that state. One of those was Matthew Zielinski, is a former Republican congressio­nal candidate who served as an officer with a county Republican Party in suburban Denver.

Zielinski tweeted that he believed in “fair ballot access” but declined further comment.

A similar pattern has played out in in Wisconsin, Ohio, Vermont and Arkansas, where lawyers or activists with GOP ties have been involved in securing the star’s place on the ballot. The successful effort in battlegrou­nd states Wisconsin and Ohio in particular raised red flags for Democrats, who are braced for a close race and anxious about any third-party candidate drawing voters.

Trump’s reelection campaign has denied involvemen­t, with spokesman Tim Murtaugh saying, “We have no knowledge of what Kanye West is doing or who is doing it for him.”

Speaking to reporters at the White House, Trump said, “I like Kanye very much” but added: “I have nothing to do with him being on the ballot. I’m not involved.”

West himself has hinted he may be in the race to detract from Biden. When an interviewe­r from Forbes suggested as much in a text message Thursday, West responded, “I’m not denying it.”

The Biden campaign did not respond to messages seeking comment Thursday. Still, the former vice president enjoyed strong support among African American voters during the Democratic primary and is counting on topping Trump by wide margins with them, as well as young voters, in November. Having West, who is Black and a hip-hop icon, on the ballot could be a ploy to hurt Biden with both sets of voters.

A third-party candidate with name recognitio­n as high as West could undoubtedl­y influence a close election. In Wisconsin in 2016, there were 36,460 write-in votes for president — exceeding Trump’s statewide margin of victory of 22,748, said David Jackson, a political science professor at Bowling Green State University whose research focuses on the links between young people’s entertainm­ent and political preference­s.

But African Americans tend not to vote for candidates solely because they are Black, while West’s status with Americans age 18 to 29 is actually more unfavorabl­e than favorable, Jackson said. That means Republican­s working to ensure he competes with Biden may not be able to peel many of their target voters away from the presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee.

“It proves that people from the opposite party really know nothing about the appeal of the other party,” Jackson said.

It’s also possible West could actually draw support away from Trump, since he’s been an outspoken supporter of the president in the past.

The Republican­s involved include Lane Ruhland, a lawyer with longstandi­ng ties to the Wisconsin Republican Party, who was captured on video dropping off signatures on West’s behalf to the election board there. The Ohio attorney who filed a ballot access form on West’s behalf in that state, Matthew Aumann, an associate at a Columbus law firm that has been paid thousands of dollars in legal consulting fees by the state House and Senate Republican campaign committees, campaign finance records show.

 ?? LAUREN PETRACCA IPETRACCA/THE POST AND COURIER VIA AP, FILE ?? In this Sunday, July 19 file photo, Kanye West makes his first presidenti­al campaign appearance, in North Charleston, S.C. West filed signatures on Wednesday, Aug. 5, in Ohio, to run for president as an independen­t candidate in November.
LAUREN PETRACCA IPETRACCA/THE POST AND COURIER VIA AP, FILE In this Sunday, July 19 file photo, Kanye West makes his first presidenti­al campaign appearance, in North Charleston, S.C. West filed signatures on Wednesday, Aug. 5, in Ohio, to run for president as an independen­t candidate in November.

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