Michael
Bloomberg, the billionaire former mayor of New York City, has told his aides to
draw up plans for an independent campaign for the U.S. presidency, according to
a source familiar with the situation.
Bloomberg
has advised friends and associates that he would be willing to spend at least
$1 billion of his own money on a campaign for the November 2016 election,
according to the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the
former mayor's thinking.
News of Bloomberg
mulling a presidential run was first reported Saturday by the New York Times.
Bloomberg, 73, has
given himself an early March deadline for
entering the race, the source said,
after commissioning a poll in December to see how he would fare against Donald
Trump and Hillary Clinton, the Republican and Democratic frontrunners.
No third-party
candidate has ever won a U.S. presidential election. But Bloomberg, who has
close Wall Street ties and liberal social views, sees an opening for his
candidacy if Republicans nominate Trump or Texas Senator Ted Cruz and the
Democrats nominate Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, the source said.
Bloomberg, who has
long privately flirted with the idea of mounting a presidential run, served as
mayor of New York City from 2002 to 2013. He switched his party affiliation
from Republican to independent in 2007 and in recent years has spent millions
on national campaigns to tighten U.S. gun laws and reform immigration.
One unnamed Bloomberg
adviser told the Times the former mayor believes voters want "a
non-ideological, bipartisan, results-oriented vision" that has not been
offered in the 2016 election cycle by either political party.
A well-financed
presidential run by Bloomberg would likely disrupt the dynamics of the
election, but the billionaire would face significant hurdles in a race that has
been in full swing for nearly a year.
SPLITTING THE VOTE
Though no third-party
candidate has ever claimed the White House, several previous bids have affected
the overall makeup of the race. In 1992 Texas businessman Ross Perot ran as an
independent, a decision that some believe helped Democrat Bill Clinton defeat
incumbent Republican George H. W. Bush.
Bloomberg earned 13
percent support when facing a hypothetical three-way race against Clinton and
Trump, according to a poll of 4,060 registered voters conducted January 14-17
by Morning Consult. Trump and Clinton were virtually tied at 37 and 36 percent,
respectively, the survey found.
Part of Bloomberg's
motivation to enter the race stems from a frustration with Clinton's campaign,
the source said. Clinton has been dogged by questions about her honesty amid an
ongoing investigation into her use of a private email server as secretary of
state.
Sanders, Clinton’s chief
rival, have recently surged in polling in key early voting states Iowa and New
Hampshire. That development has made Bloomberg increasingly worried about a
general election between Sanders, a self-described socialist, and Trump or
Cruz, both of whom have staked out far-right positions on issues like
immigration.
At the New Hampshire
Republican Party "First in the Nation Presidential Town Hall” in Nashua,
Senator Rand Paul, who is lagging badly in opinion polls, seemed unfazed by the
possibility of a Bloomberg third-party run. He even saw a bright side for his
party.
"If he splits the
Democrat vote - those for gun control - that might be good for Republicans,"
Paul told reporters.
Representatives for
Bloomberg declined to comment on the former mayor's plans for the presidential
race.

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