Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Michael Bloomberg, Next President or Next Mayor?


Bloomberg's potential Presidential bid would be organized by familiar band of aides. This cast of people advising former Mayor Michael Bloomberg on his latest prospective Presidential campaign is well known to New York's political class.

The possible makeup of the proto-campaign: Bloomberg's former City Hall Deputy Howard Wolfson, Bradley Tusk, who managed Bloomberg's 2010 re-election campaign, and Kevin Sheekey, a former Deputy Mayor.

Should polarizing outsiders Donald Trump or Sen. Ted Cruz become the Republican nominee, and self-proclaimed socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders get the Democratic nod, the billionaire former Mayor would run as a centrist, independent candidate. And he will reportedly make his decision in the first week of March and willing to put $1 Billion into a campaign.

That, at least, is his hope. Bloomberg hoped the same thing in 2008. But no swell of support for him developed. Instead, he settled for running again for Mayor.

Can history repeat itself?

In running for a third Mayoral term in 2009, Bloomberg had a problem: the city’s two-term limit law, which Bloomberg promised to abide by when he first ran in 2001. Instead, he repealed the law. Then after his re-election in 2009, he backed a return to a Mayoral two-term limit law.

Many people consider Bloomberg a successful Mayor. Major construction was begun across the city, from the Second Avenue subway to the West Side High Line. When it came to law enforcement, Bloomberg placed all power in NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly. After the Mayor, Kelly became the most powerful person in city government and the longest-serving Police Commissioner in city history.

In 2008, when Bloomberg first considered a Presidential bid, Kelly considered running for Mayor. Since leaving the department in 2014, Kelly has again made noises that he may run.

But if history repeats itself, Bloomberg will again not run for President. With Mayor Bill de Blasio struggling in the polls, Bloomberg could pull the rug out from Kelly as he did in 2008 and decide to run again for Mayor in 2017.

He wouldn’t have to worry about term limits. The law, reinstated by voters in 2010, applies to two consecutive terms.

When I was an elected official of the New York City Independence Party Organizations, I worked on Bloomberg's three Mayoral campaigns.











NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote! Michael H. Drucker
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