Boston Herald

Bloomberg reportedly eyeing Clinton as running mate

- By LISA KASHINSKY

Presidenti­al hopeful Michael Bloomberg is reportedly considerin­g Hillary Clinton as his running mate, a prospect that evoked laughter from pundits Saturday who called it a terrible idea.

“Choosing Hillary would be the worst possible choice Bloomberg could make,” said Republican strategist Mike Dennehy. “Picking a two-time loser who represents the past will ensure his defeat in the primary.”

Jason Schechter, communicat­ions director for the former New York City mayor’s presidenti­al campaign, said in a statement to the Herald, “We are focused on the primary and the debate, not VP speculatio­n.”

But speculatio­n that Bloomberg would tap the former secretary of state to join his ticket ran rampant Saturday after Drudge Report cited a source close to the campaign saying the former mayor was eyeing Clinton as a running mate.

Two New Yorkers — Clinton calls Chappaqua, N.Y., home — on the same ticket could create a potentiall­y tricky situation in the Electoral College.

But Bloomberg is reportedly considerin­g changing his official residence to homes in Colorado or Florida to avoid the issue.

Still, Clinton remains unpopular among some factions of the Democratic Party.

The latest University of Massachuse­tts Lowell poll of likely New Hampshire Democratic primary voters showed just 47% of survey takers viewing Clinton favorably and 38% viewing her unfavorabl­y in a state where she beat President

Trump in 2016.

“Clinton’s favorables are quite low even among Democratic primary voters,” said John Cluverius, a UMass Lowell political science professor and former political operative. “There’s a sense that primary voters — as much as they have staked a lot of arguments in 2020 as rehashes of 2016 — the last thing they want to do is re-fight 2016.”

Cluverius questioned whether Clinton would even accept an offer given their policy difference­s, and said the report Saturday seemed “like a publicity grab more to me than anything else” after days of negative coverage about

Bloomberg’s stop-and-frisk policy and his alleged previous comments about female employees at his company.

Bloomberg tweeted Saturday after a Washington Post article resurfaced allegation­s against him, “I would not be where I am today without the talented women around me. I’ve depended on their leadership, their advice and their contributi­ons. As I’ve demonstrat­ed throughout my career, I will always be a champion for women in the workplace.”

Still, Cluverius said, “A ridiculous Bloomberg story is probably better than a negative Bloomberg story.”

 ?? AP FILE ?? NEW YORK STATE OF MIND: Then-Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, left, and then-New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, right, march in the Salute to Israel Day Parade in 2006.
AP FILE NEW YORK STATE OF MIND: Then-Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, left, and then-New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, right, march in the Salute to Israel Day Parade in 2006.

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