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		Bloomberg faces big challenges if he leaps into 2020 White House race
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		 [November 09, 2019] 
		By John Whitesides and Ginger Gibson 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former New York City 
		Mayor Michael Bloomberg has the money and name recognition to shake up 
		the Democratic presidential race, but he will face huge hurdles to the 
		nomination if he makes the leap to become a formal candidate.
 
 The billionaire media mogul is laying the groundwork for a possible 
		candidacy and kept his options open by filing paperwork on Friday to run 
		in the Democratic primary in Alabama, which has an early deadline for 
		ballot qualification.
 
 The decision to run would be an about-face for Bloomberg, 77, who 
		announced in March that he would not seek the White House.
 
 Ranked by Forbes as the eighth-richest American with an estimated worth 
		of $53.4 billion, his potential bid drew immediate criticism that he was 
		just another wealthy businessman trying to buy an election.
 
 Bloomberg also will face questions about his record as a three-term 
		mayor of New York, particularly from the Democratic Party's vocal 
		progressive wing, and about why he is needed in a race that still has 17 
		candidates vying to challenge Republican President Donald Trump in 
		November 2020.
 
		
		 
		
 "There is no constituency for Michael Bloomberg that isn't already taken 
		by one of the candidates who are already running," said Charles 
		Chamberlain, chair of the Vermont-based progressive group Democracy for 
		America.
 
 But Bloomberg is skeptical that any of the current candidates can beat 
		Trump, according to a spokesman.
 
 The late entry into the race would force Bloomberg to play a quick game 
		of catch-up to build the sort of campaign infrastructure his rivals have 
		spent months constructing.
 
 As a result, Bloomberg will skip early contests like the Feb. 3 caucus 
		in Iowa and emphasize later voting states where his rivals will not have 
		as big an organizing advantage, starting with the Super Tuesday 
		primaries in at least 15 states including Alabama on March 3.
 
 "If we run, we are confident we can win in states voting on Super 
		Tuesday and beyond, where we will start on an even footing," Bloomberg 
		adviser Howard Wolfson said in a statement reported by the Washington 
		Post.
 
 Opinion polls show three contenders battling at the top of the 
		Democratic race: U.S. Senators Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and 
		Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who lead the progressive wing, and moderate 
		Joe Biden, the former vice president.
 
 Bloomberg has been critical of Warren and her desire to institute a tax 
		on the super-wealthy, which she would use to fund programs ranging from 
		universal healthcare to free college tuition.
 
 Biden, meanwhile, has turned in uneven debate performances and lagged 
		behind his top rivals in fundraising. Bloomberg would likely seek to 
		appeal to the same moderate voters drawn to Biden.
 
 "It's almost like he's running because this billionaire wants to stop 
		Elizabeth Warren," Brad Bannon, a Democratic strategist who advises 
		progressive groups and labor unions, said of Bloomberg. "It's lousy for 
		Joe Biden but great for Elizabeth Warren."
 
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			Former Mayor of New York Michael Bloomberg speaks in the Manhattan 
			borough of New York, New York, U.S., May 30, 2019. REUTERS/Carlo 
			Allegri/File Photo 
            
 
            Public opinion polls show most Democrats do not share Bloomberg's 
			dissatisfaction with the contenders. A Monmouth University poll 
			taken in late October and early November found three-fourths of 
			Democrats were satisfied with their choice of candidates and just 
			16% wanted someone else.
 RENEWED SCRUTINY
 
 At 77, Bloomberg, the chief executive officer and founder of 
			Bloomberg LP, would be the second-oldest candidate among the 
			Democrats in a race where age has been an issue. Sanders, who took 
			time off the campaign trail after a heart attack, is 78. Biden is 
			76, and Warren is 70. Trump is 73.
 
 Bloomberg's record as a New York mayor, and for nearly 40 years 
			running his own company, will come under renewed scrutiny in a 
			presidential race.
 
 He is certain to face criticism for New York's implementation of 
			"stop and frisk," a policy that allowed police to stop and search 
			people on the street that was decried as racist for overwhelmingly 
			targeting black men. African-American voters are a critical 
			Democratic voting bloc.
 
 Bloomberg has been panned for attempting to ban sodas sold in cups 
			larger than 16 ounces (473 milliliters), a proposal that drew 
			national criticism for supporting a "nanny state" that was 
			ultimately struck down by New York courts.
 
 Bloomberg also will face questions about his decision to run for New 
			York mayor in 2001 as a Republican. He switched to independent 
			before he ran for a third term in 2009. In 2018, while weighing 
			whether to run for president, he switched his party registration 
			again and became a Democrat.
 
 After leaving office, he emerged as one of the strongest supporters 
			of gun-control measures, pouring millions of dollars into advocacy 
			groups that push for measures to ban the sale of some guns and make 
			it harder to purchase others.
 
            
			 
            
 "It's going to be difficult, but we've never really seen a candidate 
			with this amount of resources at his disposal," said veteran Iowa 
			Democratic operative Grant Woodard, an aide to Hillary Clinton in 
			2008.
 
 "A lot of people here haven't made up their minds," he added. "There 
			could still be an opening for him."
 
 (Reporting by John Whitesides and Ginger Gibson; Additional 
			reporting by Amanda Becker; Editing by Colleen Jenkins, Cynthia 
			Osterman and Sandra Maler)
 
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