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Bloomberg Could Tie Centrists in Knots

If the New York mayor runs, he will stymie the ability of the Democratic nominee to play both sides of the fence on issues like guns, gay rights, immigration and choice

By Laura S. Washington

If Bloomberg runs, he will stymie the ability of the Democrats to play both sides of the fence on issues like guns, gay rights, immigration and choice.
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When New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg looks at himself in the mirror, what do you suppose he sees?

A hard-nosed, no-nonsense businessman? A non-partisan political operator? Perhaps a nuts-and-bolts manager? Kingmaker, spoiler, billionaire? The next president of the United States?

It’s a perplexing picture that offers up a cornucopia of possibilities. Bloomberg has newly declared himself an independent. Independent runs for the presidency can be treacherous.

“Ralph Nader” became two very dirty words after a certain megalomaniac ensured the debacle of Election 2000. His ill-timed and ill-conceived independent bid ushered in an eight-year horror story.

What does the man in the mirror mean for the left? How will a Bloomberg candidacy—or even its potential—affect the role of the left in presidential politics?

Bloomberg’s recent declaration of political independence last month sent shock waves through the Democratic and Republican sides of the burgeoning presidential contest.

A plethora of candidates from both parties—nearly 20 at last count—are scrambling for their respective nominations. If a third-party Bloomberg candidacy jumps into the fray, the presidential campaign would start to resemble a reprise of Cheaper by the Dozen.

Progressives may be too quick to dismiss the publishing magnate as too far off the reservation. In Gotham City, a surprisingly diverse number of pols and civic types are slyly and quietly trumpeting the possibilities.

With good reason. Take an issue like gun control. Bloomberg is right on the money. Listen to Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama speak in nuancedÊand tremulous tonesÊabout balancing gun violence and civil liberties. They don’t want to irritate the deer hunters of Pennsylvania, a la Al Gore.

Then listen to Bloomberg. In January 2006, he announced he would use his second mayoral term to campaign against what he called “the scourge of illegal guns.”

According to the New York Sun, Bloomberg proclaimed he would take his gun-control crusade to “Albany, to Washington, and to every capital of every state that permits guns to flow freely across its border.”

Then listen to Tom Teepen, a columnist for Cox Newspapers in Atlanta, who wrote: “If there were an Oscar for sanity about guns Bloomberg not only would deserve it but alas, also would probably be the only nominee.”

Gun control is also a signature issue for many progressives. By mid-June of this year, gun violence in Chicago had claimed the lives of 34 public-school students. Two notable civil-rights activists, the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson and Michael Pfleger, a Catholic priest, were arrested during a protest outside a busy gun store in Riverdale, a Chicago suburb. This is a gut issue for urbanites, and many were rooting for the Revs, including me.

Would a Bloomberg run, propped up by a very sturdy anti-gun plank, affect the presidential dialogue? You bet.

The Republicans may be shameless, but they are not stupid. My guess is that they won’t commit political hari-kari and allow the Iraq War to dominate the 2008 election.

Here’s the plan: move Iraq off the front page. Spin the troop stand downs, partial withdrawals, and whaddaya know—an 11th hour “victory.”

When the air clears, domestic issues will take front and center. If Bloomberg runs, he will stymie the ability of the Democratic nominee to play both sides of the fence on issues like guns, gay rights, immigration and choice.

About those guns. Bloomberg has become a favorite target of the National Rifle Association, and he doesn’t give a whit. That’s because he has money, money, money. Prognosticators are predicting nominee wannabes will have to surpass the $100 million fundraising mark to stay in the game.

Yawn. The architecture of the ‘08 race would be bent out of shape by a Bloomberg bid. Michael Bloomberg is worth about $5.5 billion, according to the latest billionaire roster from Forbes magazine. A third-party bid by Bloomberg could inject some seriously filthy lucre into the race.

Massive media buys by Bloomberg would drive the debate on domestic issues.

Those kinds of bucks will create a contortion even a yoga instructor couldn’t handle.

No one knows if Bloomberg will run. If he does, he could complicate the centrist tendencies of the Obamas, Clintons, et al. And that could be a very good thing.

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Laura S. Washington, an In These Times senior editor, teaches journalism at DePaul University and is a columnist for the Chicago Sun-Times.

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  • Reader Comments

    Illegal guns?

    You want a War on Guns?

    Look at the War on Poverty. Then there’s the War on Drugs — a lot like the experiment with alcohol which financed the big gangs in the 30s. Not a good prospect for success.

    Chicago has had a ban on guns within the city for at least two decades. Anyone notice besides those law abiding citizens who had their rights taken away?

    We put people in prison for using drugs (unless they are a celeb in rehab — then they do the talk show circuit). Wouldn’t it be better for us all and less costly to give them a choice of free drugs or treatment?

    How many of those 34 students were killed by other kids because of the War on Drugs?

    The illegal acts committed with guns and the people who misuse the guns are are the problem — can Bloomberg promise a cure for that?

    He may just make it to the WH — after all, he managed to buy the governorship for only about $85 million (if memory serves me right).

    Centrist — I guess that is the term for someone who is willing to be for/against whatever floats your boat.

    Posted by whattheheck on Jul 24, 2007 at 2:26 PM

    Ralph Nader a megalomaniac? Is that what you call someone who can’t be bought? Who tells the truth no matter how unpopoular or unpleasant? Wake up. Everything the man says is true. Just look how great the dems are doing now that they have congress back. He predicted this. Instead of blaming Mr. Nader for this mess we should be listening to him. That we didn’t listen to him all along has been our undoing.

    Posted by coolfool on Jul 25, 2007 at 3:06 PM

    Check out my article, “The Answer to Bloomberg, Ad-Free Gore!” at: http://hankedson.squarespace.com/ad-free-gore/

    Posted by hankedson on Jul 30, 2007 at 3:46 PM

    It seems as if Ms. Washington has exposed herself as nothing but a centrist Dem. When are supposed “progressives” going to stop beating that dead horse about Nader causing Gore to lose in 2000? Maybe she hasn’t heard that the Socialist candidate for Prez in 2000 garnered enough votes to swing it Gore’s way too, or that upon recount, Gore did actually win the vote in Fla. Since she wants to jump on the bandwagon of a centrist (if, in fact he really is that or is just pretending to be for votes) maybe ITT should get a real progressive voice to expound the feelings and political leanings of its readership and let Ms. Washington go somewhere else where her views on having to spend 100 mil to buy a political office (which she doesn’t seem to mind in the least) will have a welcoming audience.

    Posted by contrain1 on Aug 9, 2007 at 4:21 AM
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Appeared in the August 2007 Issue
Also by Laura S. Washington
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