Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Bloomberg calls for ‘war on poverty’

- By Kathleen Ronayne

STOCKTON >> Michael Bloomberg took his Democratic presidenti­al campaign to California on Wednesday, pledging to launch a “war on poverty” at an event in a city once known as the nation’s foreclosur­e capital.

“As president, my job will be to move all Americans ahead, and that includes committing our country to new and innovative ways to combat poverty. There has to be a war on poverty,” the New York billionair­e said while campaignin­g in Stockton.

His plan includes initiative­s to raise the minimum wage and expand affordable housing. He outlined them after a community discussion with Stockton Mayor Michael Tubbs, who endorsed Bloomberg and said he had the “record, resources and relationsh­ips” to defeat President Donald Trump.

The trip marked Bloomberg’s first to California since launching his 2020 White House bid. Since he’s bypassing the four early voting states, Bloomberg — a former New York City mayor — is hanging his campaign success on states such as California, which votes on Super Tuesday and offers the biggest delegate haul in the primary contest. He’s already spent at least $60 million on television advertisem­ents, though his spokesman wouldn’t say how much he’s spent in California specifical­ly. He said the campaign has hired three staff members in California.

Bloomberg said he thinks his pragmatic message will resonate with California­ns, nearly 15 million of whom will be eligible to vote in the 2020 Democratic presidenti­al primary.

“California­ns understand nothing’s simple — you have to have real solutions,” he said. “And you have to have the evolutiona­ry rather than revolution­ary change.”

While Bloomberg didn’t mention any of his rivals by name, it appeared a clear swat at the philosophi­es of progressiv­e candidates such as Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who is calling for a “political revolution.” Sanders is also competing aggressive­ly in California, where his campaign has dozens of staff members on the ground already.

Tubbs, who was elected in 2017, defended Bloomberg’s use of his personal fortune to fund his presidenti­al campaign, noting that Trump is a fundraisin­g powerhouse who has amassed considerab­le money for his reelection bid. He said Bloomberg’s decision to visit Stockton, where the poverty rate tops 20%, and to talk about issues like income inequality showed his priorities.

“He’s not here and stopping for money. He’s here to connect with people who usually aren’t thought of in presidenti­al campaigns,” Tubbs said.

In Bloomberg’s inequality plan, he’s proposing expanding tax credits to build low-income housing, increasing federal spending on public housing and launching a $10 billion competitiv­e program to encourage cities to ease zoning restrictio­ns that govern where and how developers can build. Proposals in the California Legislatur­e to ease restrictiv­e zoning, which critics say contribute to the state’s housing crisis, have failed.

Bloomberg is also calling for raising the minimum wage to $15 by 2025 and expanding a tax credit for low-wage workers.

Tubbs is the second California mayor to back Bloomberg; San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo endorsed Bloomberg earlier this week. Columbia, South Carolina, Mayor Steve Benjamin also threw his support to Bloomberg. In winning support from mayors, Bloomberg is cutting into a group where one of his rivals for the Democratic nomination — South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg — has been trying to lock up support.

Later Wednesday, Bloomberg appeared alongside former California Gov. Jerry Brown at an event focused on climate change. Brown, who left office earlier this year, did not endorse Bloomberg. The two launched an organizati­on aimed at fighting the rise in global temperatur­es several years ago.

Brown, speaking to The Associated Press, declined to comment on whether Bloomberg is a strong presidenti­al candidate; he has largely avoided weighing in on the contest. But he said the candidates are not talking about climate change enough.

“What is really required is the creativity of a candidate to be able to bring climate change to the forefront,” Brown said. “If Mike Bloomberg can do that, that would make a major contributi­on to the cause.”

 ?? GERALD HERBERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg listening as he testifies about gun control before Congress in Washington.
GERALD HERBERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg listening as he testifies about gun control before Congress in Washington.

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