Matthew Koma, Kanye West. Getty Images(2)
Hilary Duff’s husband, Matthew Koma, is taking a stand against Kanye West and his antisemitic speech.
“Hey I can make a shirt too – link in bio,” Koma, 37, wrote via Instagram on Monday, February 10, alongside a photo of a white T-shirt that read “F— Ye,” which is West’s current stage name.
Koma added in the comments section after getting recommendations from fans that the proceeds will be going to a nonprofit that benefits holocaust victims.
“Thank you for the charity suggestions 🧡,” he replied on Tuesday, February 11. “All proceeds going to the Blue Card holocaust survivor charity.”
The shirt that Koma designed matches the one West, 47, was selling in his store that featured a swastika. West’s website, Yeezy, which was featured in a Super Bowl ad, shut down on Tuesday. Shopify, which hosted the site, shared West’s online storefront was pulled due to violating the E-commerce platform’s terms of service.
“All merchants are responsible for following the rules of our platform. This merchant did not engage in authentic commerce practices and violated our terms, so we removed them from Shopify,” Shopify said in a statement on Tuesday, per Variety.
In addition to selling Nazi-related merchandise, West has been under fire for his recent antisemitic social media rant. The rapper took to X on Friday, February 7, to make offensive remarks about the Jewish community. He also shared a series of posts about his wife, Bianca Censori, claiming to have “dominion” over her following their red carpet appearance at the 2025 Grammys. (Censori, 30, made headlines for her completely sheer dress that left little to the imagination.)
“This ain’t no woke as feminist s—,” he wrote via X at the time. “She’s with a billionaire. Why would she listen to any of you dumb ass broke bitches. People say the red carpet look was her decision. Yes, I don’t make her do nothing she doesn’t want to.”
Following West’s tirade, his X account was subsequently deactivated. It is unclear if West or the social media platform took down the account. Elon Musk previously shared in a statement to Deadline that West’s page was “classified as NSFW.”
On Monday, February 10, music agent Daniel McCartney took to social media to announce he and the talent agency 33&West were no longer representing West.
“Effective immediately, I’m no longer representing YE (F/K/A Kanye West) due to his harmful and hateful remarks that myself nor 33 & West can stand for,” Daniel McCartney wrote via his Instagram Story. “Peace and love to all.”
West was not listed on the company’s website. Us Weekly reached out to West for comment.