Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Bloomberg to give $18M to party

- By Alexandra Jaffe and Bill Barrow

The former presidenti­al candidate is transferri­ng money from his campaign to the DNC.

WASHINGTON — Mike Bloomberg is transferri­ng $18 million from his presidenti­al campaign to the Democratic National Committee in the largest single such transfer ever.

It’s the latest sign of the billionair­e businessma­n’s continued involvemen­t in the race since ending his own campaign this month due to a lackluster showing in the March 3 primaries. In those Super Tuesday contests, the former New York City mayor won only one U.S. territory.

Bloomberg’s contributi­on amounts to more than the national party’s typical cash balance. The transfer will help the DNC make up for some of the steep fundraisin­g disadvanta­ge when compared with its Republican counterpar­t, which routinely has raised tens of millions more than the Democratic organizati­on throughout election cycles.

One of the world’s wealthiest men with a net worth estimated to exceed $60 billion, Bloomberg promised throughout his campaign that he would help Democrats try to defeat President Donald Trump regardless of how his own bid fared.

The Bloomberg campaign, which hired a staff of 2,400 people across 43 states, will also transfer its offices in six pivotal states to the Democratic parties in those states, to help accelerate their hiring and organizing. Those states are Arizona, Florida, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin.

Former Bloomberg campaign staffers in those offices will continue to be paid by his campaign through the first week in April and have full benefits through the end of April. After that, they could in theory offer the state parties a trained and ready pool of potential hires to build out their operations.

DNC officials said Bloomberg’s money and real estate transfers would be used to expand the party’s 12-state battlegrou­nd program, with a focus on hiring additional staffers to work in organizing and data operations. Bloomberg’s former campaign employees will not have any advantage in the hiring process, officials said.

“Mayor Bloomberg and his team are making good on their commitment” to stay engaged through November, said DNC Chairman Tom Perez in a statement. He added that the support will “help Democrats win up and down the ballot” and “help make sure Donald Trump is a oneterm president.”

Bloomberg dropped out of the race March 4, the day after his Super Tuesday disappoint­ment. Since then he has given tens of millions of his own money to various Democratic groups and causes.

In a memo to Perez announcing the transfer, the Bloomberg campaign said that while Trump’s “mismanagem­ent” of the coronaviru­s crisis should cost him, “we should also not assume that Trump’s incompeten­ce will be enough to make him a one-term President.”

“Trump’s ability to lie and propagate misinforma­tion, particular­ly using digital tools and other means with swing voters in battlegrou­nd states, will continue to ensure a close race in November. Every decision we make as Democrats must account for this,” the campaign wrote.

Since exiting the race, Bloomberg has contribute­d $500,000 to Voto Latino to help register Latino voters, $2 million to the group Collective Future to help register African American voters, and $2 million to Swing Left, a group focused on electing Democrats in swing districts.

The DNC’s battlegrou­nd effort targets Arizona, Georgia, Ohio, Florida, New Hampshire, Nevada, North Carolina, Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia, Texas, Virginia and Wisconsin. It’s a mix of states that have flipped back and forth between the two parties in recent presidenti­al cycles and a few that have leaned Republican but are expected to be competitiv­e in November.

 ?? DEMETRIUS FREEMAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said he would help Democrats no matter who is nominated.
DEMETRIUS FREEMAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES Former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said he would help Democrats no matter who is nominated.

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