UPDATE (Oct. 20, 2023, 11:57 a.m. ET): Cornel West on Friday said he “decided to give the money back” after accepting a maximum donation to his campaign from GOP megadonor Harlan Crow.
Cornel West’s presidential campaign received a helping hand from a right-wing megadonor, NBC News reported Wednesday. The news fuels my suspicion that his candidacy is a conservative-backed ploy to aid Donald Trump’s campaign by attempting to draw liberal votes from President Joe Biden.
The billionaire backing West is Harlan Crow — that’s right, the same benefactor who’s lavished ultraconservative Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas with undisclosed gifts for years.
As NBC News reported:
Progressive activist and independent presidential candidate Cornel West received a maximum campaign donation from Republican megadonor Harlan Crow, West’s latest fundraising report shows. Crow made the $3,300 donation in August, weeks before West abandoned his bid for the Green Party nomination to run as an independent. Crow has called West, a self-proclaimed “non-Marxist socialist” and longtime professor at Princeton University, “a good friend.”
West was on the defense in a rather long post on the platform X claiming he and “brother Harlan Crow” have political differences but that, “as an independent candidate and a free Black man, I accept donations within the limits of no PACs or corporate interest groups that have strings attached.”
As a “free Black man,” West indeed has a right to accept money from “brother Harlan” (aka the dude who bought Thomas’ momma’s house, allowing her to live rent-free). And the rest of us have a right to speculate why he’s receiving said donation.
I have a theory.
Crow, and other right-wing benefactors, have also backed the group No Labels, a purportedly centrist organization looking to get on the ballot and back their own presidential candidates in next year’s election. Similar to West, No Labels is perceived among many Democrats as a spoiler of sorts that could ultimately help Trump win next year.
The idea of West receiving help from a far-right donor comes as no surprise to me. When West launched his campaign, I noted its right-wing DNA by highlighting West’s recent dalliances with conservative extremists.
For example, in the early days of his campaign, West joined commentator Russell Brand’s conspiratorial podcast, which is hosted on a video platform — Rumble — that’s popular among right-wing extremists. And earlier this year, West praised right-wing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for his “revolutionary” approach to education.
Conservative extremists online don’t tend to hide the fact they see West as a tool they can use to pull votes from Biden and help Trump win next fall’s presidential election.








