Michael Bloomberg to spend $80 million to
help elect Democrats: NYT
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[June 21, 2018]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former New
York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a frequent critic of Republican
President Donald Trump, intends to spend $80 million helping Democratic
candidates in November's U.S. congressional elections, the New York
Times reported on Wednesday.
The report said that Bloomberg, a political independent, has directed
aides to spend the money in order to expel Republicans from power. They
control the White House, Senate and House of Representatives.
"I've never thought that the public is well-served when one party is
entirely out of power, and I think the past year and half has been
evidence of that," Bloomberg said in a statement to Reuters, which did
not confirm the dollar amount.

Bloomberg has entrusted a former executive director of the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee, which is dedicated to electing
Democrats to the House, with overseeing the money flow. Bloomberg
endorsed Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton against Trump in the 2016
presidential election.
Bloomberg has spent a significant portion of his fortune, amassed
through his eponymous media empire, promoting gun control. He founded
the group Everytown for Gun Safety in 2014 to change federal laws in
response to the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in December 2012
in Newtown, Connecticut.
His political donations have long crossed party lines, guided by his
focus on gun safety and "environmental and immigration reform measures,"
he said in the statement.
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Michael Bloomberg speaks at the unveiling of Christo's work The
London Mastaba, on the Serpentine in Hyde Park, London, Britain,
June 18, 2018. REUTERS/Simon Dawson

"To be clear: I have plenty of disagreements with some Democrats,
especially those who seek to make this election about impeachment.
Nothing could be more irresponsible," said Bloomberg in an apparent
reference to fellow billionaire Tom Steyer, who is conducting a
media blitz to remove Trump from office.
"But I believe that ‘We the People’ cannot afford to elect another
Congress that lacks the courage to reach across the aisle and the
independence to assert its constitutional authority," Bloomberg
said.
Historically, the president's party has lost congressional seats
during midterm elections as voters seek to put a check on the
country's chief executive. Democrats lost control of the House in
the 2010 elections, which conservatives considered a referendum on
Democratic President Barack Obama's mortgage and healthcare
policies.
(Reporting by Lisa Lambert and Ginger Gibson; editing by Grant
McCool)
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