Texarkana Gazette

Allegation­s could dog potential Cuban campaign

- By Jim Vertuno

AUSTIN—Mark Cuban, the billionair­e owner of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks and driving force behind TV’s “Shark Tank,” has for months teased the notion of running for president in 2020 in a campaign that could mirror President Donald Trump’s blend of reality television and politics in a ride to the White House.

But Cuban’s would-be political career could be derailed before it even gets started by sexual harassment and misconduct allegation­s within his team. The allegation­s range from a history of sexually suggestive remarks by a former team executive, to another employee being accused of domestic assault.

They leave Cuban facing deep questions about his leadership and how a team owner with a reputation for meticulous attention to detail could not be aware of nearly two decades of problems.

At his first public appearance since allegation­s were first reported by Sports Illustrate­d on Feb. 20, Cuban on Monday deflected questions about how much he knew was going on under his watch. The Mavericks have hired outside investigat­ors to look into the allegation­s raised by the magazine.

Cuban said he’s talked to the investigat­ors who will issue a report. He previously had told SI, “this is all new to me.”

“Today’s not the time for me to talk about anything,” Cuban said Monday. “This is about us moving forward.”

Cuban has dangled the prospect of a 2020 presidenti­al run and seems to relish the attention. In several interviews, he has said he is “seriously considerin­g” or “actively considerin­g” it.

He’s wealthy enough to cast an aura of not being beholden to special interest. With more than 7 million Twitter followers, he’s brash and outspoken both in the media and on social media, where he’s taken potshots at Trump and his policies. He’s a star on ABC’s “Shark Tank,” where he critiques hopeful entreprene­urs’ business ideas. He’s even explored a corner of the reality TV universe Trump never did: Turns and dips on “Dancing With the Stars.”

“Donald Trump’s election as president encouraged all kinds of people with fame and success but no real political experience to be thinking, ‘I can do it too,’” said Cal Jillson, political science professor at Southern Methodist University in Dallas.

That it took Cuban a week to hold a news conference on the allegation­s after they were first reported indicates he’s got a long way to go as a politician, Jillson said.

“If Mark Cuban were serious (about running), he would already have a half-dozen people whose job it is to lay the ground work to react … There would already be a war room,” Jillson said. “A person in the post-Trump world that thinks you can stagger your way to a nomination … that was a one-off deal.”

Like Trump, Cuban’s politics are pliable enough that it would be hard to mold him into a Republican or Democratic platform in the primaries. Cuban endorsed Hillary Clinton in 2016 and had a front-row seat at one of the televised debates to support her. But he also has said if he does run he would probably be a Republican because he considers himself a fiscal conservati­ve and a centrist on social issues.

Trump was elected in 2016 despite facing a cascade of accusation­s of sexual harassment and misconduct, while Cuban hasn’t faced any personal misconduct allegation­s.

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