Thereâs no presidential candidate quite like Dr. Cornel West. Heâs a public philosopher, not a politician; heâs more inclined to speak of Americaâs challenges as moral conundrums than as policy failures. Instead of citing Washington and Jefferson on the stump, he quotes Stevie Wonder and Duke Ellington. And instead of strategically launching the first in-person rally of his campaign in Pennsylvania or Georgia or any other number of 2024 swing states, West touched down in Salt Lake City Monday night, on the eve of the cityâs mayoral election.Â
The reason, West told a crowd of of about 200 at the University of Utahâs student union, is simple: the city is about to choose its mayor by ranked choice voting for the first time, a victory for democracy, per Westâs view. Heâd also come to endorse Michael Valentine, a 35-year-old activist facing off against an incumbent, Erin Mendenhall, and one of her predecessors, Rocky Anderson â each vying to become the leader of Utahâs most progressive city.
It didnât hurt, either, that Utahâs relatively lax rules to get on a presidential ballot â you just need to get the requisite signatures and pay a fee â bode well for West.
âAs you all know, weâre focusing on ballot access,â West said. âUtah is going to be the No. 1 state in my campaign that will put me on the ballot.â The crowd cheered.
West already wears many hats: a public intellectual, a pastor, a professor, a jazz musician. His newest one, that of âpresidential candidate,â was an uncomfortable fit at first. He launched his campaign in June on the Peopleâs Party ticket, but abandoned the group after less than two weeks. He then ran as the Green Party nominee, but by October, he cut ties with that party, too, in order to run as an independent.
âThereâs such a moment of fluidity right now,â West told me. âThereâs a general disenchantment with the establishments in both parties.â
We met a few hours before West took the stage at the University of Utah, sitting between racks of clothing at an Afro Caribbean shop in downtown Salt Lake City. He spoke about his progressive platform in sweeping terms, mentioning his efforts to combat economic disparity, climate change and racism.
Voters on the right largely ignore Westâs left-wing message. Years ago, heâd likely have been brushed aside by the left, too. But Biden is losing favor with a growing faction of progressive voters who see his support for Israel as disqualifying. Coupled with the relative success of Bernie Sandersâ socialist message in the 2016 and 2020 elections, West may be a long shot to win the White House, but he has a viable opening to at least make things interesting on the left.
But unlike Sanders, who describes himself as ânot particularly religious,â Westâs message is not just one of social revolution, but of a spiritual one. America is dealing with âspiritual decayâ and âmoral decadence,â he told me â a time when âjust being committed to a quest for truth can make you almost revolutionary.â He speaks of issues as decisions between moral right and wrong, and his biggest critique of Biden is not his platform, but his âmoral cowardliness.âÂ
âMy whole conception of the world is to look at it through the lens of the cross,â West said. âThat cross signifies unarmed truth and unapologetic love for others, no matter who they are.â
That lens has caused West to construct some unorthodox bridges. He points to his friendship with Robert P. George, a staunch conservative and one of Americaâs leading scholars on religious liberty, as a relationship that inspires him to be better.
âSince heâs âthe real thingâ as a conservative, I try to be âthe real thingâ as whatever I am,â he said. And he cherishes his friendship with the late University of Utah President Chase Peterson, who served as dean of admissions when West was admitted to Harvard. West later wrote the foreword to Petersonâs book.
âPeople would say, âHowâd this Mormon brother get this Black brother writing the preface?ââ West recalled. âWell, he was my dear brother.â
Biden was Westâs brother, too, in 2020 â in the Trump-Biden general election that year, West encouraged voters to show up for Biden, while insisting the then-Democratic nominee should go further to the left on health care policy and other issues. Three years later, West still considers Trump to be a âgangster,â but he now thinks Biden is in âdeep trouble,â too.Â
âI think thereâs a very good chance (Biden) may not even be the candidate,â West told me. âI think thereâs a good chance heâll run out of gas, and thereâs a chance Trump might end up in jail.âÂ
I asked if that was a reference to Bidenâs age. The president turned 81 on Monday. West, 70, smiled. âAll of us are growing old, so I donât worry about the age question,â he said. âItâs just a matter of whether he can be a viable candidate.â
Westâs crowd at the Utah Student Union was modest â about 200 attendees, mostly college-aged. A handful carried Palestinian flags. One told me she has family in the West Bank, and she was interested in Westâs candidacy because of his stance on the war in the Middle East. In a way, his audience was an encapsulation of the voter bloc that recent polls show are Bidenâs biggest vulnerability: young people, people of color, and those who disagree with Bidenâs support for Israel.
Westâs relationship with the Democratic Party is complicated. He worked as a senior adviser to a long-shot Democrat running in the 2000 presidential primary. He publicly endorsed then-Sen. Barack Obamaâs presidential candidacy in 2007, but after Obama reached the White House, West became disillusioned with the president, calling him a âRockefeller Republican in blackface.â He endorsed Bernie Sanders in 2016 and 2020.
While West makes few waves in national polls â ranging from 1% to 5% in most â his candidacy, especially as of late, could prove a headache for the Biden campaign. In late summer, polls showed a West campaign pulling far more support from potential Biden voters than Trump ones, as expected.
But Bidenâs support for Israel has made him vulnerable among Democratic voters who sympathize with Palestinians. Many of Bidenâs big-money Arab American boosters felt betrayed and publicly jumped ship. One State Department official resigned. Bidenâs approval rating is now at the lowest of his presidency, with the largest erosion coming from Democrats and young voters.
West stands positioned in the crevice, seemingly poised to capture support from disillusioned progressives. âI think itâs going to be one of the major issues of the election,â West said. âNo one would have thought that six months ago, nine months ago.â
When Harvard students blamed Israel for the Oct. 7 Hamas attack, West said they shouldâve included more nuance, but agreed that Israel and the U.S. were âprimarily responsible.â When Israel retaliated for the attack, he delivered an impassioned speech accusing Israel of genocide. Heâs repeatedly called for a cease-fire and criticized Biden for not doing the same.
Then late October, Westâs campaign manager called it quits, citing âextreme stressâ and âtraumaâ triggered by the war in the Middle East. The loss was significant to the campaign â Peter Daou was an ex-Hillary Clinton adviser and had extensive organizing experience, and it made Westâs chief challenge of getting on ballots across the country even more significant.
West responded with an unconventional solution: hiring four campaign managers whoâd each handle one aspect of the campaign â one on policy, another fundraising, the others advance and organizing. The staffers are in the process of âunionizing as a worker cooperative,â Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright, one of the managers, told me. And to prevent burnout, with four people carrying the load, they all get to take one weekend a month off.
The new system is patterned after John Coltraneâs jazz quartet, West said. âAs Brother Coltraneâs offering was the shape of jazz to come, this new cooperative management model is very much the shape of whatâs to come politically, electorally, and so much more.â
None of the organization will mean anything, though, if West cannot get on the ballot. Each state has different requirements for independent candidates, and one of the significant barriers West faces after ditching the Green ticket is losing the partyâs well-established infrastructure for ballot access.Â
âItâs going to be difficult,â Rogers-Wright said. âBut the people who love Brother West the most are organizers.â
Not all of those organizers are wholly convinced that a West candidacy is the answer, though. One student who attended the Monday rally said he âliked Westâ but didnât want âto put Trump in the White House.â Another said he thought âWest would be way better than Biden, but Biden would be way better than Trump.â When I asked him if he was implying he feared voting for West would risk a Trump victory, he hesitated, then nodded. âYeah,â he said.
West rejects this line of reasoning. Citizens should vote for a candidate, not against one, he said. âI come from a tradition of a people whose anthem is âLift Every Voice,â not âfollow the pied piper,ââ he said. âI donât own their vote. Nobody owns anybody elseâs vote.â
He leaned back in his chair and began telling a story. He was in Los Angeles recently, he told me, at a barber shop on Skid Row. A man approached him. âBrother West,â the man said. âWe sure appreciate you giving us a choice, because with Trump, youâve got Civil War II, and with Biden, youâve got World War III.â
West raised his hands to his chin, contemplatively. âWeâve reached the point where this is a choice between mendacity and criminality, or mediocrity and criminality,â he said.
I asked which of those two options is more dangerous. He thought for a moment. âItâs a choice you donât want to make,â he said. âYou can never confine yourself to just the framework or the status quo. Youâre always looking for an alternative.â