The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Trump gets played by Kanye West

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What is sure to be one of the weirder moments of the 2024 presidenti­al campaign has just taken place before the campaign is even fully underway.

Here is the short version: Just before Thanksgivi­ng, former President Donald Trump had dinner at Mar-a-Lago with Kanye West, Nick Fuentes and Milo Yiannopoul­os. West is the famous rapper, businessma­n and reported bipolar disorder patient who says he will run for president in 2024, a campaign he began last month by announcing on Twitter that he was “going death con 3 on JEWISH PEOPLE,” a threat that brought him widespread condemnati­on and the loss of lucrative contracts.

Fuentes is a 24-year-old white nationalis­t self-promoter who has sought publicity and online donations with a long series of racist and antisemiti­c statements and is now, apparently, working for West’s so-called campaign.

Yiannopoul­os is a 38-yearold British provocateu­r who has spent a good part of his life doing the same sort of thing that Fuentes does and is now apparently also working for YE24, which is how West, who wants to be known simply as “Ye,” refers to his presidenti­al campaign.

What do they have in common? Well, Fuentes and Yiannopoul­os are joined in a quest to exploit West’s money and fame. But as far as politics is concerned, the greater similarity is that they are all lowlifes who should never be allowed near a former president of the United States, much less a current candidate for president.

And yet Trump shared a table at Mar-a-Lago with them. The event quickly leaked because that is precisely what West, Fuentes and Yiannopoul­os intended. The usual suspects in the media and political world immediatel­y denounced Trump. And, in this case, they were correct; as a former president recently embarked on another campaign, Trump shouldn’t have anything to do with fringe figures such as Ye and his crew. And yet there they were.

Who benefits from this ugly and stupid little event? Well, it was a publicity coup for West, Fuentes and Yiannopoul­os — after all, they don’t have any reputation­s to lose — while Trump looks like he has been played by a trio of clever publicity hounds. And Trump did not make himself look any better with his increasing­ly panicked-sounding explanatio­ns for what took place.

“So I help a seriously troubled man, who just happens to be black, Ye (Kanye West), who has been decimated in his business and virtually everything else, and who has always been good to me, by allowing his request for a meeting at Mar-aLago, alone, so that I can give him very much needed ‘advice,’” Trump wrote on his social media site, Truth Social. “He shows up with 3 people, two of which I didn’t know, the other a political person who I haven’t seen in years. I told him don’t run for office, a total waste of time, can’t win. Fake News went CRAZY!”

As Trump was explaining, West and Fuentes were laughing. Both seemed delighted at having pulled off the coup of enlisting Trump, the former president, in a stunt to promote West’s own presidenti­al foray. West released a brief video showing himself joking with an associate about things Trump said during the dinner.

West and Fuentes managed to recruit Trump to play an unwitting role in West’s campaign show. Judging by the videos they made, they seemed to think it was both a major accomplish­ment and absolutely hilarious.

Meanwhile, Trump has been damaged, again, by his own actions. There is a debate about how intentiona­l those actions were. Despite his protests of ignorance, did the former president in fact know who Fuentes was and decided to send some sort of message by dining with him? The answer to that is unclear.

But Trump certainly knew who West was and welcomed him. That’s bad enough. It is hard to see what benefit Trump might have expected from the dinner. What was it going to accomplish? Score points with the alt-right fringe?

What seems more likely is that Trump did not have any clear intention for the dinner. So why did he take part in it? For one thing, he loves celebritie­s, and Kanye West, even damaged Kanye West, is a celebrity. Trump also loves flattery, and West had said all those nice things about Trump on TV. And at the dinner, Fuentes was a veritable flattery machine, repeatedly telling Trump how great Trump was. Not surprising­ly, Trump thought Fuentes was a really sharp guy. In other words, West, Fuentes and Yiannopoul­os might simply have pushed Trump’s buttons over and over and over. That might be all there was to it.

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