Michael S. Bloomberg already has his name plastered on the walls of the Johns
Hopkins University, on the highly successful financial-information company that
earned him billions and on the mayor's office in New York City.
Now, it seems increasingly clear, he wouldn't mind putting it on the Oval
Office at the White House, too. The Republican mayor took a significant step on
Tuesday toward a potential independent candidacy for president by announcing
that he was quitting his party and becoming an independent.
 New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg listens during a press
conference during his visit to the 311 call center in New York, Wednesday
June 20, 2007. A day after quitting the Republican Party and registering
as unaffiliated, Bloomberg continued to send mixed signals about his
intentions, discussing both his mayoral term and vowing to address the
major issues facing the country. [AP]
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Bloomberg, 65, who cannot run again for mayor because of term limits, has yet
to announce a presidential candidacy. Indeed, while he has stoked speculation,
he has seemingly sought to deflate it by denying he has plans to run. "A short,
Jewish billionaire from New York? C'mon," he has said when asked about his
potential 2008 candidacy.
In a statement released by his office last evening, Bloomberg, a former
Democrat, said that his "plans for the future haven't changed." He then went on
to list achievements that his "nonpartisan approach" had produced for his city
on many of the domestic issues central to the '08 campaign: economic growth,
public health, security and education.
"We have achieved real progress by overcoming the partisanship that too often
puts narrow interests above the common good," he said. "Any successful elected
executive knows that real results are more important than partisan battles and
that good ideas should take precedence over rigid adherence to any particular
ideology. Working together, there's no limit to what we can do."
Bloomberg's statement was released while he was in California on a trip that
has stoked further interest in his Washington ambitions.
Featured with popular California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger on the cover
of this week's Time magazine (which portrayed them as "The New Action Heroes"),
the mayor delivered a major speech Monday night in Los Angeles that had all the
earmarks of a presidential campaign address. He also made a recent visit to New
Hampshire, the first presidential primary state.
An independent run by Bloomberg would have to surmount the same hurdles that
face any third-party candidate in a system dominated by Democrats and
Republicans. Simply obtaining a place on the ballot is an arduous and expensive
task in most states, often requiring petitions signed by large numbers of
voters.
That might be less of a problem for Bloomberg than for most independent
contenders. His personal wealth would allow him to hire signature-collection
companies to do the job.
The financial information company he founded and largely owns, Bloomberg LP,
is privately held. His share of the company has been estimated to be worth as
much as $13 billion.
The last major third-party candidate to seek the presidency was, like
Bloomberg, a wealthy self-made man - Ross Perot - who also largely funded his
own campaign. In 1992, Perot led in the polls for a time, before quitting the
race; he re-entered and wound up with about 19 percent of the popular vote and
no electoral votes.
Perot's candidacy that year served as a catalyst, however, boosting
Democratic nominee Bill Clinton's chances and, many Republicans believe, hurting
the re-election chances of incumbent Republican President George H.W. Bush.
Bloomberg's potential impact on the '08 contest has been a matter of
considerable speculation. Rising voter discontent with politics in Washington is
reminiscent of the mood in the early 1990s, and the mayor has sought to position
himself as an antidote to the capital's partisanship.
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