April 30, 2018

From Hurricane Katrina to Donald Trump, what Kanye West really believes

WATCH: Trump responds to Kanye West tweets of support: 'MAGA!'

After Kanye West's recent tweet storms, praising Donald Trump one day and Emma Gonzalez the next, many of his fans have been left wondering what exactly the star performer believes.

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images
Activist Emma Gonzalez speaks onstage at The Center Dinner 2018 at Cipriani Wall Street on April 19, 2018 in New York City.

Over the weekend, the 40-year-old rapper called Gonzalez, a leading voice in the movement spawned by the mass shooting at her Florida high school, his "hero." He then posted a photo of himself with a shaved head, which he said was "inspired" by Gonzalez.

inspired by Emma pic.twitter.com/TiZMthLK92

— KANYE WEST (@kanyewest) April 29, 2018

Just days before that, West praised the president, whom most would consider on the opposite side of the political spectrum. He called Donald Trump "my brother," and the president responded by thanking the rapper for his words.

"Very cool!" Trump added.

West's comments about Trump caused an uproar on Twitter, with some fans denouncing him and others lamenting that they missed the "Hurricane Katrina Kanye."

@kanyewest via Twitter
Kanye West tweeted this photo of himself wearing a Trump "Make America Great Again" hat, April 25, 2018.

The latter was when West shocked the world during a live nationally broadcast telethon when he went off script and said, "George Bush doesn’t care about black people."

If it seems like West has shifted positions between then and now, one thing has remained constant: his refusal to be pigeonholed.

"I haven't done enough research on conservatives to call myself or be called one," he tweeted last week. "I'm just refusing to be enslaved by monolithic thought."

Below is a look back at some of West's political musings, past and present:

Kevork S. Djansezian/Getty Images
Rapper Kanye West, right, attends the Los Angeles Lakers vs. Memphis Grizzlies basketball game at Staples Center on November 5, 2017, in Los Angeles.
Kanye West’s new song ‘Lift Yourself’ has fans scratching their heads Kanye West and Donald Trump bond on Twitter

College Dropout

On West's debut album, he rapped about his grandfather's being arrested after taking West's mother, Donda, who was 6 at the time, to a whites-only lunch counter in Chicago. "Racism still alive, we just be concealing it," he rapped.

Homophobia

West railed against homophobia in hip hop during a 2005 MTV News interview. "I wanna just come on TV and just tell my rappers, just tell my friends, 'Yo, stop it fam,'" he said.

Hurricane Katrina

Venting the frustration felt by many regarding the government's response to the 2005 hurricane in New Orleans, West blurted out, "George Bush doesn’t care about black people" during a live telethon raising money for relief efforts.

Five years later, after Bush told Matt Lauer that was one of the low points of his presidency, West tweeted, "I can't be everything to everybody anymore. I can't be everybody's hero and villain savior and sinner Christian and anti Christ!"

Kanye for President

At the 2015 MTV Video Music Awards, West announced he would run for president in 2020 but later told Vanity Fair in an interview, "I hate politics. I'm not a politician at all."

President Obama

West and Barack Obama have had an uneasy relationship, with the former president reportedly calling the rapper a "jackass" after he interrupted Taylor Swift receiving an award at the "MTV Video Music Awards." In recent days, he seemed to take a swipe at Obama when he tweeted "nothing in Chicago changed" after the president's eight years in office.

He also name-checked Obama in his new song "Ye vs. the People, when he raps, "I know Obama was Heaven-sent/But ever since Trump won, it proved that I could be president."

President Trump

West first shocked his fans during his 2016 Saint Pablo tour when he said on stage that had he voted in the presidential election, he would have voted for Trump. That December, West and Trump met at Trump Tower in New York City, after which the then president-elect told reporters that they'd been friends "for a long time." Though Trump said that they discussed "life," West maintained that the meeting was about "multicultural issues."

More recently, West tweeted that he was sounding off on Trump so that others could express themselves freely. He added that he loved Hillary Clinton too.

Candace Owens

West lauded conservative commentator Candace Owens, saying he "loves the way" she thinks.

She quickly repaid the compliment, asking for a meeting with the superstar.

It appears she got her wish. West was photographed meeting with Owens and her boss, Charlie Kirk, founder of the conservative youth organization Turning Point USA.

John Legend

West posted a series of tweets about his good friend John Legend, making it clear that even though they may disagree politically, there is still love between them.

West also insisted that he's still "the kid from the telethon."