China Daily

Bloomberg opens door to 2020 race

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WASHINGTON — Michael Bloomberg, the billionair­e former mayor of New York City, is opening the door to a 2020 Democratic presidenti­al campaign, warning that the current field of candidates is ill-equipped to defeat US President Donald Trump.

Bloomberg, who initially ruled out a 2020 run, has not made a final decision on whether to jump into the race. If he were to launch a campaign, it could dramatical­ly reshape the Democratic contest less than three months before primary voting begins.

The 77-year-old has spent the past few weeks talking with prominent Democrats about the state of the 2020 field, expressing concerns about the steadiness of former vice-president Joe Biden’s campaign and the rise of liberal Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts, according to people with knowledge of those discussion­s. In recent days, he took steps to keep his options open, including moving to get on to the primary ballot in Alabama ahead of the state’s filing deadline on Friday.

In a statement on Thursday, Bloomberg adviser Howard Wolfson said the former mayor believes Trump “represents an unpreceden­ted threat to our nation” and must be defeated.

“But Mike is increasing­ly concerned that the current field of candidates is not well positioned to do that,” Wolfson said.

Bloomberg’s moves came as the Democratic race enters a crucial phase. Biden’s front-runner status has been vigorously challenged by Warren and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, who are flush with cash from small-dollar donors. But both are viewed by some Democrats as too liberal to win in a general election faceoff with Trump.

Bloomberg, a Republican­turned-independen­t who registered as a Democrat last year, has flirted with a presidenti­al run before but ultimately backed down, including in 2016. He endorsed Hillary Clinton in that race and, in a speech at the Democratic Party convention, pummeled Trump as a con who has oversold his business successes.

Bloomberg plunged his efforts — and his money — into gun control advocacy and climate change initiative­s. He again looked seriously at a presidenti­al bid earlier this year, traveling to early-voting states and conducting extensive polling, but decided not to run in part because of Biden’s perceived strength.

Currently, Forbes is placing Bloomberg’s net worth at $52 billion, which means he is one of the world’s wealthiest individual­s.

With immense personal wealth, Bloomberg could quickly build out a robust campaign operation across the country. Still, his advisers acknowledg­e that a late entry to the race could make competing in states like Iowa and New Hampshire, which have been blanketed by candidates for nearly a year, difficult. Instead, they previewed a strategy that would focus more heavily on the March 3 “Super Tuesday” contests, including in delegate-rich California.

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