Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Ex-candidate Bloomberg to give $18 million to DNC

- Alexandra Jaffe and Bill Barrow

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 because of 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 White House bid fared.

The Bloomberg campaign, which hired a staff of 2,400 people across 43 states, will also transfer its offices 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 staffers in those offices will continue to be paid by his campaign through the first week in April and have full benefits through the end of April. After that, they could in theory offer the state parties a trained and ready pool of potential hires to build out their operations heading into the November general election.

DNC officials 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 staffers to work in organizing and data operations. Bloomberg’s former campaign employees will not have any advantage in the hiring process, officials 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 one-term 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 effort targets Arizona, Georgia, Ohio, Florida, New Hampshire, Nevada, North Carolina, Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia, Texas, Virginia and Wisconsin. It’s a mix of states that have flipped 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.

Though the DNC will never match its GOP counterpar­t in financial muscle, Perez and party leaders have placed a premium on coordinati­on across the Democratic spectrum this presidenti­al cycle after watching Republican­s quietly upstage them on data operations and voter outreach in 2016.

Democrats are still putting together a data exchange that will link campaigns, the national party’s voter file and voter informatio­n from independen­t groups such as the Priorities USA Super PAC, a major advertisin­g and voter outreach player for Democratic efforts.

As part of that effort, Bloomberg and every other Democratic presidenti­al candidate who bought the DNC’s national voter file committed to update voter informatio­n. That means, for example, that likely nominee Joe Biden’s presidenti­al campaign will be able to use voter informatio­n that Bloomberg’s massive campaign operation gleaned.

Bloomberg’s direct aid to the national party is possible only because he was a presidenti­al candidate. Federal campaign finance laws place caps on how much an individual can give a political party committee. But individual­s can loan or contribute as much of their personal money to their campaigns as they want. In turn, presidenti­al campaigns can transfer unlimited sums to official party committees.

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