President-elect Donald Trump met Tuesday with several black celebrities, including rap mogul and possible future presidential candidate Kanye West, to talk about some of the issues facing inner city African-Americans.
“I feel it is important to have a direct line of communication with our future president if we truly want change,” West later said in a tweet.
Trump met with West, former NFL linebacker Ray Lewis and NFL icon and civil rights leader Jim Brown, along with longtime Trump backer Omarosa Manigault, at Trump Tower in New York City on Tuesday. West refused to comment with reporters after the meeting, instead saying only “I just want to take a picture right now” as he posed for pictures with Trump.
A few minutes later, West tweeted that he met with Trump “to discuss multicultural issues” including bullying, education and “violence in Chicago.”
West announced last year at the Video Music Awards that he would run for president in 2020. That means he would face Trump if the president-elect seeks a second term. After meeting with Trump, West hashtagged a tweet #2024 , the first time someone would be able to run for president outside of a possible two-term Trump presidency.
Brown and Lewis said they talked with Trump about the new administration partnering with Brown’s “Amer-I-Can” outreach program, which aims to teach life skills to young people from poor backgrounds.
Former Browns running back Brown said he didn’t vote for Trump. But “we couldn’t have had a better meeting,” said Brown, a three-time MVP who retired from football to pursue an acting career and crusade for racial justice. “The graciousness, the intelligence, the reception we got was fantastic.”
Lewis, a former Super Bowl MVP, said on Twitter that “wherever Papa JB asks me to go I go. His vision is beyond platforms.”
After the meeting, Lewis praised the Amer-I-Can program, saying because of it “we have 30,000-40,000 former gang members who’ve changed their lives.”
If they can partner with the Trump administration, “forget black or white. Black or white is irrelevant,” Lewis said. “The bottom line is job creation and economic development in these urban areas to change the whole scheme of what our kids see.”