
Kanye West is pushing ahead with his presidential campaign and aiming to get on the ballot in the swing state of Ohio as well as states like Arkansas and West Virginia in the coming days. The effort comes as over a dozen states have ballot deadlines in the next week, including Vermont and Colorado, where it is not necessary for candidates to petition their way onto the ballot. West’s nascent third-party presidential campaign has hit a variety of road blocks in recent weeks after he declared his candidacy on Twitter and successfully paid a $35,000 filing fee to appear on the ballot in Oklahoma. Although the rapper’s presidential campaign filed the requisite number of signatures to appear on the ballot in Illinois, Missouri, and New Jersey, there’s a strong possibility that he may not appear on the ballot in any of those states.
In Illinois, West’s campaign barely cleared the threshold of 2,500 signatures required after a frenzied last-minute effort in the state that included canvassers standing in a supermarket parking lot next to the state board of elections only hours before the deadline. His campaign faces three different challenges in Illinois that raise questions not only about the validity of the signatures he gathered but whether the paperwork submitted by West was inherently insufficient. Among other issues, the rapper did not submit the name of a vice presidential running mate or a slate of electors in Illinois.
In New Jersey, he faces allegations of fraud. Scott Salmon, a New Jersey elections lawyer, challenged West for submitting signatures that he described as the “most egregious” case of fraud he’s seen. Salmon told Vulture’s sister vertical, Intelligencer, that he pulled up West’s petitions out of curiosity and it immediately jumped out to him: “Why does literally every signature on the same page look the same?” After going through the petitions, Salmon concluded that close to 700 of the 1,327 signatures West submitted were questionable. Further, West has not yet submitted the names of those who circulated petitions as required by New Jersey law.
The rapper needs 800 valid signatures to appear on the ballot in the Garden State. In addition, while West submitted a full slate of electors, Salmon discovered that half of them are not registered to vote in New Jersey and thus would be ineligible. One elector listed is Victory Boyd, an R&B singer close to Kanye whose father, John Boyd, was on the ground for the campaign in South Carolina serving as West’s “spiritual adviser.” An administrative court judge will hear arguments in the case on Tuesday morning. The push in Ohio is particularly notable for West because it would represent the first presidential swing state where his campaign would appear on the ballot. West started to mount an effort in July in Florida before deciding not to follow through.
To appear on the ballot in Ohio, West will need to gather 5,000 valid signatures by Wednesday at 5 p.m. One well-connected politico in the state was skeptical that the rapper could do so. “It’s a challenge” said the operative, who spoke on background in order to discuss the West campaign freely. “Last-minute big-dollar efforts seem especially vulnerable” to falling short in Ohio, the source noted, pointing to Jon Heavey, an aspiring 2018 gubernatorial candidate who failed to petition his way onto the ballot first as a Democrat and then as an independent — despite spending over $1 million on the effort.
West faces lower burdens in Arkansas and West Virginia, which both have August 3 deadlines. His campaign had been petitioning in West Virginia since last weekend and will need to submit over 7,000 valid signatures. In Arkansas, only 1,000 signatures are required.
The West campaign did not respond to a request for comment.