Rapper Kanye West's campaign website says "our future is waiting on us," but even with a big nudge from voters in Minnesota, it might have to wait until 2024.
The musical artist folded his 2020 presidential campaign with some 60,000 votes across the nation, at least 7,654 of them coming from Minnesota, a state with a tradition of backing third-party insurgencies like that of former Gov. Jesse Ventura.
Minnesota gave West his second-largest statewide vote total after Tennessee, where more than 10,200 fans voted for the first-time candidate.
While some saw West as a Trump campaign stand-in to siphon off votes from Joe Biden, the entertainer's tally didn't come close to salvaging Minnesota for President Donald Trump, who lost the state by about 234,000 votes.
Still, the Christian-infused rapper, once an avowed Trump backer, made a bigger splash in Minnesota than he did in all but one of the 12 states where he managed to get on the ballot.
When West announced his White House bid in July, DFL Party leaders noted that he seemed to be getting a lot of help from Republican figures in states such as Wisconsin, Colorado and Minnesota, which was then seen as a potential battleground that Trump had vowed to win.
Among those who worked on the 43-year-old rapper's unsuccessful effort to get on the ballot in Wisconsin was Twin Cities attorney Erick Kaardal, a former official in the Minnesota Republican Party.
Until West announced his candidacy as a "Birthday Party" candidate on July 4, his most high-profile brush with politics had been an extended rant he gave during a 2018 White House visit with Trump.