Edmonton Journal

Bloomberg the latest 2020 hopeful

FORMER N.Y. MAYOR

- LINDA SO AND JOHN WHITESIDES

WASHINGTON • Billionair­e media mogul Michael Bloomberg, the former mayor of America’s largest city, jumped into the race for the Democratic U.S. presidenti­al nomination on Sunday as a moderate with deep pockets unabashedl­y aiming to beat fellow New Yorker Donald Trump in the November 2020 election.

Bloomberg’s belated entry into the race — just three months before the first of the state-by-state party nominating contests — reflects his skepticism that any of the other 17 Democratic candidates can unseat the Republican president.

“I’m running for president to defeat Donald Trump and rebuild America,” Bloomberg, a 77-year-old former Republican, said in a statement launching his campaign.

“We cannot afford four more years of President Trump’s reckless and unethical actions,” he said.

The move represents an about-face for Bloomberg, who had said in March he would not run for president. He will compete with former vice-president Joe Biden and Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Ind., to become the moderate alternativ­e to liberal U.S. Senators Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders.

Bloomberg, founder and CEO of prominent media company Bloomberg LP and a leading philanthro­pist, has a financial advantage over his Democratic rivals. It already is on display as he has spent at least US$31 million in television ads that will run in states across the country over the next two weeks, a campaign spokesman said.

He has won allies in the party with his advocacy and philanthro­py on climate change and in fighting gun violence, pouring millions of dollars into groups pushing for more restrictiv­e gun laws.

Bloomberg will face significan­t disadvanta­ges because of his late start, which means he will be playing catch-up with rivals who have been putting together campaign staffs for months.

Ranked by Forbes as the eighth-richest American with an estimated worth of US$53.4 billion, Bloomberg joins activist Tom Steyer as the second billionair­e to enter the Democratic race and will have the advantage of being able to self-finance his campaign and pour millions of dollars into advertisin­g and hiring staff.

He announced earlier in November a Us$100-million online ad campaign targeting Trump in four battlegrou­nd states.

“We do not believe that billionair­es have the right to buy elections,” Sanders said in a Twitter post on Sunday.

 ??  ?? Michael Bloomberg
Michael Bloomberg

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada