Las Vegas Review-Journal

CANDIDATE BLOOMBERG’S PROGRESSIV­E BONA FIDES COULD BE QUESTIONED

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— things like choice, so many of the issues, I’m just way away from where the Republican Party is today,” Bloomberg said. “That’s not to say I’m with the Democratic Party on everything, but I don’t see how you could possibly run as a Republican. So if you ran, yeah, you’d have to run as a Democrat.”

Bloomberg said he had no specific timeline for deciding on a presidenti­al run: “I’m working on this Nov. 6 election and after that I’ll take a look at it.”

There is considerab­le skepticism among Democratic leaders, and even some of Bloomberg’s close allies, that he will actually pursue the presidency, because he has entertaine­d the idea fruitlessl­y several times before, and shown little appetite for the rough-and-tumble tactics of traditiona­l partisan politics. A campaign would require him to yield his imperial stature as a donor and philanthro­pist, and enter a tumultuous political and cultural climate that could make him a highly incongruou­s candidate for the Democratic nomination.

Though he has received a hero’s welcome from Democrats for his role in the midterms, Bloomberg is plainly an uncomforta­ble match for a progressiv­e coalition passionate­ly animated by concern for economic inequality and the civil rights of women and minorities.

In the interview Friday — his first extended comments on his thinking about a 2020 presidenti­al run — Bloomberg expressed stubbornly contrary views on those fronts. He criticized liberal Democrats’ attitude toward big business, endorsing certain financial regulation­s but singling out a proposal by Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-mass., to break up Wall Street banks as wrongheade­d. He also defended his mayoral administra­tion’s policy of stopping people on the street to search them for guns, a police tactic that predominan­tly affected black and Latino men, as a necessary expedient against crime.

And while Bloomberg expressed concern about allegation­s of sexual misconduct that have arisen in the last year, he also voiced doubt about some of them and said only a court could determine their veracity. He gave as an example Charlie Rose, the disgraced television anchor who for years broadcast his eponymous talk show from the offices of Bloomberg’s company.

“The stuff I read about is disgracefu­l — I don’t know how true all of it is,” Bloomberg said of the #Metoo movement. Raising Rose unprompted, he said: “We never had a complaint, whatsoever, and when I read some of the stuff, I was surprised, I will say. But I never saw anything and we have no record, we’ve checked very carefully.”

Bloomberg said the media industry was guilty of not “standing up” against sexual misconduct sooner, but declined to say whether he believed the allegation­s against Rose. “Let the court system decide,” he said, while acknowledg­ing that the claims involving Rose might never be adjudicate­d in a legal proceeding.

Rose, 76, has been accused by numerous women of unwanted and coercive sexual behavior, including claims that he groped female subordinat­es and exposed himself to them. He was fired by both CBS, where he hosted a morning show, and PBS, which broadcast the program “Charlie Rose,” which Rose recorded in the Bloomberg office. Bloomberg TV also terminated an arrangemen­t that allowed it to rebroadcas­t Rose’s show.

“You know, is it true?” Bloomberg said of the allegation­s. “You look at people that say it is, but we have a system where you have — presumptio­n of innocence is the basis of it.”

On policing, Bloomberg said that there had been “outrageous” cases of police abuse and unjustifie­d shootings around the country. But he said stop-andfrisk searches had helped lower New York City’s murder rate and insisted that the policy had not violated anyone’s civil rights.

He dismissed a court ruling to the contrary as the opinion of a single judge that could have been overturned on appeal. Bloomberg suggested many Democrats would agree with him on policing.

“I think people, the voters, want low crime,” Bloomberg said. “They don’t want kids to kill each other.”

Asked whether, in retrospect, he saw any civil rights problems with stop-and-frisk tactics, Bloomberg replied: “The courts found that there were not. That’s the definition.”

In 2013, a federal district judge, Shira A. Scheindlin, ruled that the stop-and-frisk policy had been carried out in an unconstitu­tional way. Bloomberg’s administra­tion assailed the decision and vowed to appeal it, but his successor, Mayor Bill de Blasio, a Democrat, declined to do so.

Despite his obvious divergence from the Democratic Party on some key issues, advisers to Bloomberg believe he would have a plausible route to its presidenti­al nomination if he stood out as a lonely moderate in a field of convention­al liberals challengin­g President Donald Trump.

Bloomberg has mapped an energetic travel schedule for the midterms that will also take him to battlegrou­nd states that would be crucial in a presidenti­al race. He will make stops in Michigan, Florida and Pennsylvan­ia and address influentia­l liberal groups, including the League of Conservati­on Voters and Emily’s List, aides said. And he is weighing a visit to the early primary state of South Carolina.

Bloomberg is also preparing to reissue a revised edition of his autobiogra­phy, “Bloomberg by Bloomberg,” aides confirmed.

Democratic leaders have so far embraced Bloomberg, giving him a regal reception aimed at ushering him securely into the party. At a climate conference in San Francisco, he stood beside Gov. Jerry Brown of California, a popular Democrat, to show support for the Paris climate agreement. And in an embrace laden with political symbolism, Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-calif., the House Democratic leader, introduced Bloomberg at two events as a herculean champion of the environmen­t and a master of business and government.

“His name is synonymous with excellence,” Pelosi said, at a dinner atop the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. “And he knows how to get the job done.”

In a private conversati­on at the dinner, Bloomberg pressed Pelosi to govern the House in a bipartisan way if Democrats take power, he said — a message he also trumpeted publicly in Las Vegas as he pleaded with Democrats to pursue the center. “Candidates who listen to voters in the middle are more likely to reach across the aisle and to get things done,” Bloomberg argued there.

Beyond the most rarefied political precincts, however, Bloomberg and his White House hopes have stirred a mixture of curiosity and consternat­ion. In Nevada, Barbara Buckley, a former speaker of the state Assembly, expressed surprise at the notion of a presidenti­al campaign.

“He’s still a Republican, isn’t he?” Buckley said at a fundraisin­g dinner hosted by the Women’s Democratic Club of Clark County. Of Bloomberg running as a Democrat, she said, “I think people would question why he’s changing at this point in his career.”

Tick Segerblom, a progressiv­e lawmaker in Nevada, said he appreciate­d Bloomberg as an ally of the Democratic Party and would keep an open mind about him as a candidate. Segerblom, who hosted Warren at an event over the summer, volunteere­d to welcome Bloomberg at his home.

“He’s been so fantastic on the environmen­t and so fantastic on guns,” Segerblom said. “I don’t know, when you get into some of the economic issues, how progressiv­e he is.”

Bloomberg’s advertisin­g for House Democrats is expected to begin in the coming days, with his spending trained on a few clusters of races in expensive television markets, including in California and Pennsylvan­ia. His first three targets are Los Angeles-area seats held by Reps. Steve Knight and Dana Rohrabache­r, Republican­s running for re-election, and an open seat near San Diego held by Rep. Darrell Issa, a Republican who is retiring.

The advertisin­g blitz includes $4 million in the final 10 days of the election in the Los Angeles media market alone, aides said. Close allies of Bloomberg are divided as to whether it would be wise for him to run for president in 2020, and at least one longtime associate has predicted that he will never seek the White House. Bradley Tusk, Bloomberg’s former campaign manager who helped him explore an independen­t candidacy in 2016, declared at a recent dinner in Washington, D.C., that he expected Bloomberg to toy with running before opting out yet again, multiple people who attended the event confirmed.

Asked about that prediction, Tusk said in a text message, “No one is better suited to be president than Mike Bloomberg.”

“Running for president and being president aren’t always the same thing,” Tusk continued. “So we’ll see what he decides, but he’s the best option by far.”

 ?? BRIDGET BENNETT / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Michael Bloomberg poses for photos with supporters of stricter gun control Sunday in Las Vegas. Bloomberg is considerin­g a presidenti­al run as a Democrat, even as he voices stark disagreeme­nts with progressiv­es on defining issues including bank regulation, stop-and-frisk police tactics and the #Metoo movement.
BRIDGET BENNETT / THE NEW YORK TIMES Michael Bloomberg poses for photos with supporters of stricter gun control Sunday in Las Vegas. Bloomberg is considerin­g a presidenti­al run as a Democrat, even as he voices stark disagreeme­nts with progressiv­es on defining issues including bank regulation, stop-and-frisk police tactics and the #Metoo movement.

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