Kanye West is teasing a new trap sounding song among what he perceives to be a victory,

Yeezy is many things just receptive to correction doesn't seem to be 1 of them. The rapper took to Twitter on Tuesday (Oct. 13) to share an update on the presidential race in which he is a candidate. The polling data he displayed on his iPhone had him in third identify in Kentucky alee of both Donald Trump and Joe Biden. Even so, it was later on reported that the integrity of the information is compromised.

Kanye W shared a video of him jubilant the false results on Twitter. "GET THE West Fly READY !!! … this is how I felt when I saw that Kentucky pole result," he tweeted. We're not going to talk about the fact that a presidential candidate was stumped by a homophone so crucial to his political career. Instead, permit's discuss how Kanye blatantly ignored the fact that the information he shared was rendered inaccurate even after Twitter flagged his post equally "Manipulated media."

Despite Kentucky'south Lex xviii News denying the actuality of the polling numbers and announcing that the results were "just a test," Kanye West carried on with the narrative on social media. The rapper previewed a new song called "Nah Nah Nah" on Twitter over clippings of Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith and Joaquin Buckley'due south victorious UFC fight. Alongside the video that teased the new track, Kanye wrote, "THE WHOLE TEAM IS And so ENERGIZED THAT I HAD TO RELEASE THEME MUSIC NAH NAH NAH."

In the new track, Ye mentions his candidacy rapping, "Next time you lot text, can information technology wait? / You are talkin' to a presidential candidate." Interestingly enough, the rapper also denounces the credibility of the news media. "All the stars came from us / All the styles came from u.s.a. / All the talent came from usa / All the shoes came from the states," he raps. "But the news ain't on united states / All the news ain't on u.s.a. / All the news own't honest / They wanna ignore me, rewrite the story."

While Kanye can smell the victory, the news can scent the cap.