Published
5 years agoon
By
AP NewsLOS ANGELES — Mike Bloomberg’s plan for California – export it.
Democratic presidential candidate Michael Bloomberg, center, joins Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti at Philippe The Original, a historic deli serving up signature French dip sandwiches in downtown Los Angeles on Monday, Jan. 6, 2020. The Democratic presidential candidate and former New York City mayor likes a lot of what he sees in the Golden State and thinks its efforts on climate change, gun control and criminal justice reform sets a benchmark for other states to emulate. (AP Photo/Michael R. Blood)
Bloomberg’s visit came as part of a swing through a state that he sees as central to his hopes of winning the White House. After a late entry into the race, Bloomberg is bypassing the first four primary and caucus states and is anchoring his strategy to California and other Super Tuesday states on March 3.
The political moderate argued that Trump has divided Americans, while he can unite them, and that as Washington languishes in gridlock, he has a record of accomplishment as mayor.
Among the crowd was Los Angeles investor Mike Connolly, who said he feared the Democratic Party was drifting too far to the political left and was drawn to Bloomberg’s fiscally conservative, socially liberal blueprint. And, importantly, he believes Bloomberg can defeat Trump.
[rlic_related_post_two]
“He’s got the right policies” for most Americans on critical issues like gun violence and climate change, said Connolly, an independent who voted for Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama.
Campaign offices are typically drab affairs located in old storefronts or shopworn, budget-rate offices. But Bloomberg’s virtually unlimited budget was on display — his cavernous office was in trendy downtown, its interior accented with industrial chic decor and lush plantings.
Bloomberg earlier joined Mayor Eric Garcetti, a Democrat who flirted with a presidential run, for an early lunch at a downtown restaurant.
“The mayor is paying for it,” Bloomberg quipped. “Ït’s a good deal.”
No-Go for Joe Exotic: Trump Pardon List Omits ‘Tiger King’
California Pins Vaccine Hopes on Biden Administration
Walters: After COVID-19, Drought Threat Still Looms
Fierce California Winds Fan Fires, Topple Trees and Trucks
Trump Pardons Ex-Strategist Steve Bannon, Dozens of Others
Monarch Butterfly Population Moves Closer to Extinction