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December 15, 2007
Unique and trusted U.S. politician, Bloomberg, speaks out

A sparsely filled conference room at the Ayodya Hotel in Nusa Dua was the location for the most interesting happening at the climate change summit on Thursday.

Away from the heated negotiations where ministers appeared to be in deadlock, there was a very unusual American politician sharing his vision for combating global warming.

It’s the arrival of Nobel peace prize winner, Al Gore that has attracted much of the attention, while the lesser known Michael R Bloomberg received a far more muted reception.

But it is Bloomberg, who is the mayor of New York City, who should win an award for political bravery and conviction.

Speaking at a forum arranged by the leading non-governmental organization, Environmental Defense, Bloomberg laid out a rich array of exciting green initiatives that he’s introducing in his city.

Michael Bloomberg is a conviction politician.  He has gained a reputation for pushing policies in which he believes, regardless of their popularity.  He was responsible for banning smoking in all public places in the city.
He has come to Bali on behalf of 700 cities which are part of an organization called Local Governments for Sustainability (ICLEI).

This group represents over three billion city dwellers which amount to roughly half of the world’s population.

“The voice of the world’s cities needs to be heard here in Bali, and at all future forums where climate change policy is debated and developed,” he said.

He talked about the success of congestion pricing for cars during business hours in the cities of London, Stockholm and Singapore. 
Bloomberg explained his plans to introduce a fee for driving into the busiest business districts in New York, initially as a pilot project.  And he provided highlights of some 127 innovative environmental initiatives which are being implemented in the Big Apple.

“You can’t think about air quality without thinking about energy and you certainly can’t think about energy without addressing the central topic of this week in Bali: Global warming,” he added.

While not entirely alone, Mayor Bloomberg is one of only few US politicians to speak out on environmental issues. 

 “People everywhere recognize that time for discussion about whether global warming exists has passed.  The science is clear.  Now it’s time for action,” boldly proclaimed the Mayor.

But he conceded that climate change is not high on the American political agenda, and is unlikely to be much debated during next year’s presidential election campaign. 

Bloomberg speaks a very different language from most elected politician in the US today.

In spite of his long term interest in environmental issues and a concern for climate change which started much before he became Vice President, Al Gore never dared speak out is such a way when he was running for the White House.

It was during his administration that the US failed to ratify the Kyoto Protocol.  And he never mentioned the issue of global warming during his election campaign. 

Unlike Mayor Bloomberg, Al Gore believed that it would be far too big a political risk to raise the topic.

There is little doubt that Gore has contributed far more in the fight against climate change since he hang up his political hat.  Having disposed of  his political muzzle, Gore has become the world’s most powerful spokesman on this crucial issue.

At today’s meeting, Environmental Defense’s climate change head, Peter Goldmark, introduced Bloomberg as “a unique and trusted figure on the US political landscape”.

As the mayor departed, I heard rumblings in the room from people lamenting his decision not to run for the White House.

Perhaps next year’s presidential hopefuls will learn a lesson from Mayor Bloomberg – that voters admire honest visionaries who are prepared to do the right thing.

Americans are like everyone else in the world.    They worry about their future.  Concern about the threat of climate change is growing in the US. 
Even the current president appears to have accepted that global warming is happening.  And there are exciting signs of innovation from the private sector.

If Bloomberg isn’t prepared to stand, maybe there will be a presidential candidate with the courage to speak out on climate change. 

I hope it’s not wishful thinking to believe that such audacity will be rewarded by the American people at the ballot box.
 
(Jonathan Wootliff, Nusa Dua, Bali. The writer is an independent sustainable development consultant, specializing in the building of productive relationships between companies and NGOs.  He can be contacted at jonathan@wootliff.com)

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From Newsweek article...

November 12, 2007  --  Pressed once more, [Mayor Bloomberg] says he is not running, but then offers a lucid, if indirect, case for a man like him at a time like this. "I think that the candidates are not addressing, in a way at least I can understand, what they would do if they got elected. Unfortunately in the process that we go through—all of these, quote, 'debates'—you've got 30 seconds to tell us what you're going to do about the Iraq War, 30 seconds to tell us how to solve health care, 30 seconds on how to repair our relations around the world, 30 seconds on solving Social Security—there's no way to do that.

"The job of being president is to lead the country and the legislature, and it is pulling those together. And because America is the only remaining superpower, you are the leader of the free world, it is having the credibility and working with other countries to get them all to work together to stop genocide, to stop nuclear proliferation, to make sure we have fair trade among countries … Trade, immigration, terrorism, fighting disease—all of those things require cooperation. And one of the sad things is that at the moment America is not liked around the world. We are closing our eyes. We have this view that we can do it alone, as we are getting more into a world where you can't. You couldn't do it before, and you certainly can't do it now, and it's inconceivable that you could do it tomorrow. And I don't hear from the candidates how they would go about pulling the world together, getting people to respect us. How do you get people to respect you? Show them recognition, respect, that you are listening to them. I don't care how smart we are, other people have good ideas, and what works here isn't perfect for them."

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Bloomberg says no, but his stump speech says maybe 

By Sam Youngman 
August 28, 2007 

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg (I) said Tuesday he is not running for president. But he did not stop there.

After offering advice to Washington and New York reporters as to how they should best cover the 2008 presidential campaigns, the mayor went on to offer a laundry list of issues — from Iraq to Social Security to immigration — that presidential candidates should address.

And after all that, Bloomberg took the time to pose for pictures outside the National Press Building with supporters holding signs that read: “Bloomberg ’08: DraftMichael.com.”

His political alter-ego Kevin Sheekey was then seen taking business cards from the would-be draft leaders.

Bloomberg was in Washington Tuesday to address the Brookings Institution’s Center on Children and Families after the release of the census poverty report.

And despite the news he made with his speech, in which he said he wanted to see a dramatic expansion of the earned income tax credit, it seems the mayor can’t step foot inside the Beltway without being hounded by questions about a possible candidacy.

On other issues, Bloomberg, who sent interest soaring when he changed his political affiliation from Republican to Independent earlier this year, said everyone, including both major political parties and both sides of Pennsylvania Avenue, are to blame for not keeping the U.S. competitive.

Read whole article here.

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These Ten People Want to Make Bloomberg President

New York Magazine

August 1, 2007 -- If it's Tuesday night at seven, then it's time for a weekly organizational meeting of the New York City Chapter of the Committee to Draft Michael Bloomberg. And last night, Karin Gallet, the New York chapter's mastermind and newsletter writer, sipped an Amstel Light as she ran the group's fourth meeting at the Old Town Bar. A grand total of nine people joined her, and she set a stark goal: to collect 15,000 signatures on a "Draft Mike" petition by Christmas. (Only 1,500 per person!) Cue the jaunty, let's-get-to-work montage.

Gallet sees Bloomberg as someone "socially liberal, economically responsible, who really transcends the two-party system," and she sees herself as a typical Bloomberg voter. Others attendees, who'd traveled from the right and left sides of the political spectrum, and from the right and left sides of town, agreed. Dr. Simpson Gray was talking about his forthcoming book on — what else? — why Bloomberg should be president. "I work at the Department of Education, and I've seen the changes, especially regarding the treatment of minorities," Gray said. "It was Bloomberg who changed it." ("He holds himself and everyone who works for him accountable," Gallet gushed.)

The elephant in the room — the donkey in the room? — was the small issue that Bloomberg might well refuse to be drafted. Gallet suggested the group act as if they won't know for sure until February. At that point, the theory goes, the electorate will look at the two major parties' nominees and decide they need a third choice, even if it is yet another New Yorker. Maybe Bloomberg won't run, or maybe he'll start running next week, effectively killing a committee whose very success would render it useless. For now, though, there are petition drives, cold beer, and good conversation. Plus spiffy buttons, which Gallet was distributing. "They're gonna be a hot commodity one day," she said. To which came the inevitable, wishful response: "Especially if he runs." —Marc Tracy

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A Political Force With Many Philosophies
Survey of Independents, Who Could Be Key in 2008, Finds Attitudes From Partisan to Apathetic

By Dan Balz and Jon Cohen, Washington Post Sunday, July 1, 2007; A01

The power of independents could also be felt in other ways next year. The survey found frustration with political combat in Washington and widespread skepticism toward the major parties -- perhaps enough to provide the spark for an independent candidacy by New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg.

Seventy-seven percent of independents said they would seriously consider an independent presidential candidate, and a majority said they would consider supporting Bloomberg, whose recent shift in party registration from Republican to unaffiliated stoked speculation about a possible run in 2008.

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Campaigns Cost Millions. Can You Spare a Dime? 

By Matthew Mosk
Sunday
Washington Post, July 1, 2007

In a blasé age in which pundits talk airily about whether New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg might drop $500 million on a White House bid, it's easy to forget the staggering weight of the transactions that undergird the U.S. political system. All those campaign lawn signs, get-out-the-vote drives, Web sites and (above all) 30-second television ads exist only because of the endless phone solicitations, e-mail blasts, direct-mail drops, cocktail parties and banquets through which courses the lifeblood of the modern-day campaign.

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Pledging Allegiance to No One in Particular
By David S. Broder Sunday Washington Post, July 1, 2007; B03
California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger thinks he knows exactly what voters are looking for in the next occupant of the White House.

"People want bold leadership," he said in a phone interview last week, "somebody who is clear in his or her views, who can make tough decisions and who will reach across the aisle to address the important issues -- health care, immigration, public safety, climate change and the rest -- someone who has a vision and a plan for the future, well beyond the next election."
"People are looking for leaders who can bring people together," he added. "If the parties don't provide them, then a latecomer can come in from the outside and provide the leadership that will work on the problems."

Schwarzenegger declined to speculate on the identity of such a candidate. But he has already met with and praised one possible contender, New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, with whom he shared a recent Time magazine cover.
But the support for an independent has deeper roots than just antipathy to particular candidates. Doug Bailey, one of the leaders of Unity08, an organization planning an Internet "convention" to nominate an independent national ticket, said, "People sense the [political] system is broken, and this can't be like recent elections or we're really in trouble."

While these independents swung substantially to the Democratic side in 2006, 77 percent of them say they would seriously consider voting for an independent if one were running. Doing so wouldn't be new for many of them; half of them say they already have voted for independent or third-party candidates for president or statewide office.
And there are a lot more of them now than there were back in 1992, when Ross Perot made his third-party run, let alone earlier years when John B. Anderson and George C. Wallace tried. Estimates now are that 30 percent or more of American voters consider themselves independents -- almost as many as call themselves Democrats and outnumbering the Republicans.
More than half of those in this survey said they would consider voting for Bloomberg if he were to run.
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Bloomberg poised for third-party campaign

By Ralph Z. Hallow
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Published May 15, 2007

New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg is prepared to spend an unprecedented $1 billion of his own $5.5 billion personal fortune for a third-party presidential campaign, personal friends of the mayor tell The Washington Times.

"He has set aside $1 billion to go for it," confided a long-time business adviser to the Republican mayor. "The thinking about where it will come from and do we have it is over, and the answer is yes, we can do it."

Another personal friend and fellow Republican said in recent days that Mr. Bloomberg, who is a social liberal and fiscal conservative, has "lowered the bar" and upped the ante for a final decision on making a run.

The mayor has told close associates he will make a third-party run if he thinks he can influence the national debate and has said he will spend up to $1 billion. Earlier, he told friends he would make a run only if he thought he could win a plurality in a three-way race and would spend $500 million -- or less than 10 percent of his personal fortune.

A $1 billion campaign budget would wipe out many of the common obstacles faced by third-party candidates seeking the White House.

"Bloomberg is H. Ross Perot on steroids," said former Federal Election Commission Chairman Michael Toner. "He could turn the political landscape of this election upside down, spend as much money as he wanted and proceed directly to the general election. He would have resources to hire an army of petition-gatherers in those states where thousands of petitions are required to qualify a third-party presidential candidate to be on the ballot."


More Press...

Bloomberg Discussed in Washington Post Video

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May 15, 2007

Craig Crawford’s Trail Mix: Hagel’s Bloomberg Ticket More Than a Dream

By Craig Crawford, CONGRESSIONAL QUARTERLY
The fatigue factor with major parties in presidential politics could well open the door to what Nebraska Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel strongly hinted over the weekend — that he and New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, also a Republican, would make a winning team in an independent bid.
Bloomberg denies planning a presidential run, despite his nationwide speaking schedule and a second-term mayoral agenda emphasizing immigration and other national issues with local tie-ins.
Hagel, who has more openly pondered a run, revealed on CBS’ Face the Nation that he and Bloomberg dined recently. Then he ruminated about a joint run, saying “I think Mayor Bloomberg is the kind of individual who should seriously think about this.”
And if the frontloaded primary schedule means that the major parties settle on nominees by early February, there is plenty of time for Hagel and Bloomberg, a very rich man with the bucks to fuel a quick startup similar to Ross Perot’s in the spring of 1992.
Contributing Editor Craig Crawford is a news analyst for NBC, MSNBC and CNBC. He can be reached at ccrawford@cq.com.
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Why a Bloomberg run could matter

By: David Paul Kuhn and Jonathan Martin

May 24, 2007

Michael Bloomberg has repeatedly denied he is running for president -- but as with any politician, Bloomberg's actions are speaking louder than his words.

In the past month, the Republican mayor of New York has launched a revamped website -- replete with a focus on national issues from the environment to gun control to education -- and spoken at a conference in Houston outlining a national energy policy.

Only days after Bloomberg's Houston appearance, maverick Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.) hinted broadly that he was considering joining forces with the billionaire mayor to run for the White House as independents.

If Bloomberg does decide Washington would make a suitable sequel to New York City, experts agree, he could have a decisive impact on the 2008 race.

Politico.com

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Hagel-Bloomberg In '08? You Never Know

WASHINGTON, May 13, 2007
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(CBS) The Republican Party has been "hijacked" and led away from its core values, Chuck Hagel, the Republican Senator from Nebraska, said Sunday on Face The Nation.

Hagel, who is still considering his options for the 2008 race, left open the possibility of becoming an independent and sharing a ticket with New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

"I am not happy with the Republican Party today," Hagel said. "It's been hijacked by a group of single-minded almost isolationists, insulationists, power-projectors."

Hagel said he will not decide if he is going to run for president until late this summer. He did not say if he would run as a Republican or as an independent. Asked by Bob Schieffer if independent candidates would be good for the political system, Hagel said they would be.

"What America will be looking at and wanting and demanding is honest, competent, accountable leadership," he said. "We need some new, fresh, independent ideas to lead this country forward."

After dining with former New York's mayor, who is also said to be considering a run for president as an independent, Hagel said people might want to consider the two on a ticket.

"We didn't make any deals, but I think Mayor Bloomberg is the kind of individual who should seriously think about this," Hagel said. "He is the mayor of one of the greatest cities on earth. He makes that city work. That's what America wants."

He said, "It's a great country to think about - a New York boy and a Nebraska boy to be teamed up leading this nation."

The Washington insiders on the Face The Nation roundtable said they could see the attraction of a third-party ticket.

"It's the kind of thing that it's so tantalizing, I think it meets a need not just with the political system but with the public," said Michelle McQueen Martin of National Public Radio. "I mean, you see a yearning within the public for another option."

Read whole article here.

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New York Sun; May 8, 2007 Edition > Section: New York

Bloomberg Stokes Speculation While Playing Down 2008 Talk
BY GRACE RAUH - Staff Reporter of the Sun
May 8, 2007

Mayor Bloomberg is using his campaign promise record as an excuse to talk about presidential politics, saying yesterday that the press must hold presidential candidates accountable and force them to explain their solutions to tough issues.

By the mayor's count, his administration is fulfilling 96% of the 100 promises made during the 2005 campaign. More than 91% of the 482 promises made during the 2005 and 2001 campaigns are completed or are being implemented, he said.

"I'm not running for president, but I do think that every presidential candidate should put out a list of every single one of the key issues," Mr. Bloomberg said, directing his comments to reporters attending a news conference at a high school in Queens. "If some of them miss some of them, go and get them to fill those in and create a matrix. This is what I'd do."

Mr. Bloomberg is considered a possible presidential candidate and appears to enjoy speculation about a White House run.

In fact, he further stoked the fire on such talk, reminding reporters that he is delivering an energy speech in Houston and a commencement speech in Oklahoma on Friday. His travel schedule, which this year has included trips to Mexico, Ireland, London, and Israel, has fueled murmurs about a national campaign. He said the "most likely scenario" is that he will finish his term and begin a career in philanthropy.

When asked about issues the press corps should watch carefully in the presidential campaign, Mr. Bloomberg said everyone wants peace and prosperity, but candidates must explain how they are going to achieve it.

"Nobody wants the war in Iraq to continue, but how are you going to pull out and what happens next?" he said. "You've got to be able to say, ‘If pulling out of Iraq causes this, this is what I would do.' ‘If staying in Iraq causes that, this is what I would do.'"

Talk of the war in Iraq and the presidency also hung in the air at the Newspaper Association of America's annual convention in Times Square, where a White House hopeful, Governor Huckabee, and Governor Spitzer weighed in on Iraq, Hurricane Katrina, and governing.

"It is an embarrassment before the nation, before the world, that we cannot pass a budget that funds our troops, that ensures their safety and their security," Mr. Spitzer said. "The underlying intellectual argument for it is now bankrupt."

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