The Daily - Michael Bloomberg’s Not-So-Secret Weapon
Episode Date: February 18, 2020Despite being a late entry into the race for the Democratic presidential nomination, Michael R. Bloomberg, the billionaire media tycoon and former mayor of New York City, has surged in the polls and i...s winning key endorsements before he’s even on the ballot. Today, we explore the hidden infrastructure of influence and persuasion behind his campaign — and the dilemma it poses for Democrats. Guest: Alexander Burns, a national political correspondent for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading: Who is Mr. Bloomberg? And where does he stand on the key issues?We took a look at how Mr. Bloomberg’s enormous wealth helped build a national political network, and an empire of influence, for his campaign.His run has proved complicated to cover for the media empire he owns.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Bavaro.
This is The Daily.
Today.
Despite a late entry into the Democratic presidential race,
Michael Bloomberg has surged in the polls
and is winning key endorsements before he's even on the ballot.
and is winning key endorsements before he's even on the ballot.
Alex Burns on the hidden infrastructure of influence and persuasion behind Bloomberg's campaign and the dilemma that it poses for Democrats.
It's Tuesday, February 18th.
So, Alex, happy Valentine's Day.
Happy Valentine's Day.
Thank you.
You know, in honor of Valentine's Day, I want you to watch this ad, Alex, and read what's being played on the screen.
Okay.
It says, roses are red, violets are blue.
Your associates are criminals.
What does that make you?
America deserves better.
Defeat Trump.
And it says, paid for by my Bloomberg 2020.
Alex, what are we seeing here?
Alex, what are we seeing here?
Well, we're seeing the kind of in-your-face taunting of the president's former associates who are in jail or about to go to jail.
People like Roger Stone and Paul Manafort, their faces sort of surrounded by hearts and flowers.
And that all adds up to this crowd-pleasing taunt directed at the president by this campaign that has enough money to do anything.
What kind of money are we talking about?
Well, we're talking about at least $400 million so far. That's an astonishing sum of money for any campaign, let alone a campaign that has only existed for about three months. And that $400
million has gone heavily into TV advertising, a lot of digital advertising, a lot of polling,
an enormous amount of staff that
they say that they have over 2,000 people on staff right now. That's larger than most campaigns are
in a general election. And this is a primary campaign. And it is only February. Right. And
our reporting is that Mike Bloomberg has essentially directed his campaign to spend
whatever it takes. And is all that spending working? Well, it's gotten him pretty far in not a lot of time. He has gone from not a candidate
to somewhere in the double-digit range in the polls. He's either second or third in a lot of
national polls, depending on what time period exactly it was taken in. He's caught up in some
places to Joe Biden, who has obviously had a bit of a rough patch recently.
And so if the theory of the Mike Bloomberg campaign was
spend whatever it takes in the winter
so that if Joe Biden takes a dive,
you're the guy waiting,
I would say that strategy has worked pretty well so far.
And I'm reminded of the fact that
it has worked without Mike Bloomberg
ever even showing up on a debate stage, which is normally how a candidate rises in the polls.
In some ways, it might work because Mike Bloomberg hasn't showed up on the debate stage yet.
And I'm not just saying that to be sort of snarky, that he has managed to create this idealized version of Michael Bloomberg.
Anyone hear the slogan? Mike will get it done.
And broadcast it to the country.
Okay, let me tell you what it is.
With these hundreds of millions of dollars in television ads.
As president, I'll offer common sense plans and I will get it done.
So let's stay on the offensive.
So this idea that Michael Bloomberg is trying to buy the Democratic primary, or at least buy his way into it, it's not untrue at this point.
No, his position in this race is totally inseparable from the amount of money that he has spent on his campaign.
We had two people dive into this race at the 11th hour.
One was Mike Bloomberg with his $400 million campaign.
The other was Deval Patrick, the two-term governor of Massachusetts,
one of the few African-American governors in American history.
Mike Bloomberg is now somewhere in the mid-teens in the polls.
Deval Patrick dropped out after the New Hampshire primary.
And in fact, Mike Bloomberg, who was not on the ballot in New Hampshire,
got more write-in votes in that state
than Deval Patrick got as a candidate listed on the ballot.
Wow.
It's the power of television advertising in a state that overlaps heavily with TV markets that Michael Bloomberg is in all the time.
Right.
But if you think his spending in this campaign has been consequential, the picture is actually much broader and deeper than that.
is actually much broader and deeper than that.
He has been spending not hundreds of millions of dollars over months, but billions of dollars over years to build a political and philanthropic empire for himself and a national profile
and network of influence that we are now seeing applied in so many ways in this race.
And this, Alex, is the investigation that you have been working on these past few weeks.
That's right. My colleague Nick Kulish and I have spent actually the last couple months
sort of combing through all the spending that Mike Bloomberg has done in the political arena
and in philanthropy essentially over the course of his public career
and trying to track where that money has gone and what kind of friends it has made for him.
Mike Bloomberg is worth estimated around $60 billion.
It's a fortune built on a financial information and news company.
And he has used that money to advance a whole range of causes that he personally cares about, as well as the politicians who he sees as strong leaders for those causes for well over a decade at this point.
Those activities have accelerated dramatically since he left office as mayor.
Which was 2013.
Right.
And what are some examples of the causes and the characters who've received this money?
He gives an enormous amount of money to causes like fighting climate change, like advancing
gun control policies, and more recently, like electing Democrats for the sake of electing
Democrats.
And what's complicated about that?
Well, in the context of an election, what's complicated is that you have somebody who can make or break your cause or organization or campaign with his personal checkbook.
So one example, at the end of September in 2018, Emily's List, the premier pro-choice women's Democratic group in the country, is hosting a major fundraising luncheon in New York.
Every announced speaker is a prominent Democratic woman, except am out in Seattle as Mike Bloomberg is engaging in all kinds of public-minded activities.
And we do an interview, and I ask him about the Me Too movement.
He is somebody who is trying to position himself now nationally as a progressive.
Tonight, new questions about Michael Bloomberg and the company he founded that made him a billionaire.
But he himself has been accused of making all kinds of crude remarks to and about women.
You have been accused in the past of making lewd and sexist comments
and fostering a frat-like culture at your company that was uncomfortable for some female employees.
ABC's actually spoken to several women who want to share their stories,
but you won't release them from their NDAs.
As Senator Warren put it, she was here last week. She said, if your company has
an enviable record, what do you have to hide? We don't have anything to hide, but we made
legal agreements, which both sides wanted to keep certain things from coming out. They have a right
to do that. As a corporate leader, he ran a company that has faced serious discrimination allegations.
Did I ever tell a body joke? Yeah, sure I did. And do I regret it? Yes, it's embarrassing.
But, you know, that's where I grew up. Body.
So when I ask him about this, his response is to say that a lot of the things that he has heard coming out of the Me Too movement are alarming, but he doesn't know how true they are.
And he specifically raises the case of Charlie Rose, the disgraced news anchor who for years taped his show in the offices of Mike Bloomberg's company.
And is a friend of Mike Bloomberg.
And is a personal friend of longstanding.
in the offices of Mike Bloomberg's company.
And is a friend of Mike Bloomberg.
And is a personal friend of longstanding.
And he said that essentially he wasn't going to judge him one way or another until a court adjudicated the issue.
And then he acknowledged that a court would probably never adjudicate the issue.
This is not a sentiment in keeping with the progressive moment.
At all.
Certainly not in keeping with the perspective of Emily's List.
In fact, you might even say it's the kind of thing that would get a person disinvited
from a speaking slot at a luncheon for Emily's List.
And it very nearly did.
What our reporting indicates is that Emily's List was mortified by his comments in that
interview and that there was a very serious internal debate
about whether to ask him not to appear at the luncheon.
But that ultimately the leaders of the organization
decided that he was somebody
they could not afford to alienate.
And what ended up happening was in late September,
Mike Bloomberg got up at this Emily's Luncheon in New York.
In the background,
the Kavanaugh hearings are raging in Washington,
and he announces that he is going to spend more money
helping elect women to office
than anyone else in history.
He ends up spending more than $100 million
supporting Democrats in the midterm elections,
including helping elect 21 new members
to the House of Representatives.
Of the 21 winning members he supported, 15 were women.
So if there are things about his worldview and his personal conduct and his business record
that make progressive women very uncomfortable,
there is nothing uncomfortable about the way he used his checkbook in 2018.
What's another example of the complexity
of Mike Bloomberg's money?
So I spoke to a number of people,
current and former employees
of the Center for American Progress,
major liberal think tank in Washington, D.C.,
about a report that was being prepared
in February of 2015.
It was about Islamophobia in America.
And we reviewed a draft of the report. And the
draft included a whole chapter of more than 4,000 words about the New York Police Department under
Mike Bloomberg and its surveillance of Muslim Americans. Right. This was a very invasive
style of policing. It involved going into mosques, getting into communities with undercover police
officers. It was highly unusual. It was. And in the draft of this report, it was held up as
an example of really the most sophisticated institutionalized form of Islamophobia and
discrimination in law enforcement. Pretty damning. Except it was never published.
When the draft was submitted,
one senior official
at the Center for American Progress
pointed out that
if it were published in its current form,
it would draw a strong response
from Bloomberg's world.
And when the report was published,
not only was the chapter entirely removed,
but Mike Bloomberg's name was never mentioned.
Not once.
Not once.
And does Mike Bloomberg give to the Center for American Progress?
Or is this about the very real possibility that someday he will give or he will give to causes near and dear to this group?
It's both.
At the time the draft was submitted, Bloomberg had already given nearly $1.5 million in grants to CAP. Since then,
he's given an additional $400,000 as far as we know. What do these two stories tell you?
What they tell you is that Mike Bloomberg's money has become this gravitational force
this gravitational force unlike any other in democratic politics where people are tailoring their activities and their agendas to try to align themselves with him even if he's not explicitly
asking them to in the case of that cap report the folks on the mike bloom Bloomberg side said they were never aware of this report being prepared or the controversy around its preparation. We have no reason to believe.
It's self-censorship.
Right. We have no reason to believe, based on our reporting, that anyone who works directly for Bloomberg said, you need to remove that chapter. But the chapter was removed.
In other words, the Democratic world wakes up every day with some level of fear that they might offend Mike Bloomberg and a desire to please him.
And this is what you're now seeing happen on a national scale in this campaign.
It's not that you've seen some massive stampede of support towards Mike Bloomberg within the Democratic establishment. But what you have seen is people who may have
been critical of him in the past when he was a Republican, not necessarily speaking up so loudly
in this campaign. You have seen people who might be offended by elements of his record as mayor
coming out and either endorsing him for president or calling him a very plausible contender for this
Democratic nomination. And you have seen, of course,
on the strength of all that television advertising,
Mike Bloomberg tell a story about who he is and what he has done with his money
that Democratic voters seem to find pretty appealing.
We'll be right back. So, Alex, just how much money are we actually talking about?
What did the investigation that you and Nick did find about the scale of this?
I covered City Hall for many years when Bloomberg was mayor.
And when I covered City Hall, we actually did an investigation into how much money the mayor was giving away during that period.
And I remember the number being pretty staggering.
It was.
It was in the range of $260 million.
And what Nick and I found in this investigation is that at the time that story was written, the true number was about 10 times that.
I'm sorry?
Yeah, it was about 10. Look, you did a great job with the information that story was written, the true number was about 10 times that. I'm sorry? Yeah, it was about 10.
Look, you did a great job with the information that was available.
In the course of reporting this story, though, what became clear to us was that there is the philanthropy that we know of that's disclosed on tax forms or that's announced publicly.
And then there's other kinds of philanthropy that Bloomberg engages in that is much, much harder to track down.
that Bloomberg engages in that is much, much harder to track down. In fact, impossible to track down without cooperation of some kind from Mike Bloomberg himself. And what it all adds up to
is more than $10 billion of giving on philanthropy and spending on politics. And it's overwhelmingly
weighted towards philanthropy. So when we think of the spending
on this campaign or on his mayoral campaigns or on the Democratic Party, it is a fairly small
fraction of the money that Mike Bloomberg gives away as a matter of course. Alex, I think I
understand the power of that philanthropic giving from the examples you gave around Emily's List
and the Center for American Progress. Can you give us a little bit more a sense of his giving to candidates?
Well, for years, his political giving was really agenda-driven and issue-driven,
more than it was driven by the party label associated with a candidate. What our reporting
showed is that Bloomberg has spent about $270 million on a pair of organizations, one that kind
of grew out of the other. The first is called Mayors Against Illegal Guns, which he operated
from within City Hall. After the Sandy Hook shooting, that morphed into a group known as
Everytown, now arguably the anchor gun control group in the country. helping lawmakers in different states and cities draft gun laws and then defend them in court,
providing cities and states that are thinking of passing gun control laws with data to justify it.
And for years, he was a sort of party neutral donor. If you were with him on guns, he was with
you. And most of the people who were with him on guns were Democrats. But if you were, for instance, Senator Pat Toomey, very conservative Republican from Pennsylvania,
who agreed to introduce background checks legislation in the Senate, Mike Bloomberg
ended up spending almost $12 million in the 2016 election helping Toomey get reelected.
And is it clear to you that as with Mike Bloomberg's other philanthropic donations,
that these political donations have resulted in the same kind of reticence to cross him, to challenge him?
You know, one of the most vivid anecdotes that we heard about the gratitude that candidates feel to Mike Bloomberg came from just a couple weeks ago when he went to Capitol Hill to ask lawmakers there for their support in the presidential race. And normally when a presidential candidate goes up to the Hill, they kind of go hat in hand, meeting with members of Congress and saying,
could I please have your support? In at least one meeting that we heard about with the New
Democrat Coalition, it's a group of moderates in the Democratic caucus, Bloomberg sits down
and the lawmakers go around the table introducing themselves to him. And according to two people who
were in the room, one after another began by saying,
thank you so much.
You spent this much in my race
or you supported me in my last two elections.
And many of those people have not endorsed him,
but most of them haven't endorsed somebody else.
And the Bloomberg advisors that we have spoken to
have again stressed that we have never promised
or implied that you will get
support in the future in exchange for an endorsement. But every Democratic member of Congress
in a tough race can look at what Mike Bloomberg did for the party in 2018 and draw their own
conclusions. So how are we going to see all of this, everything that you've been describing here,
play out in the Democratic primary as Bloomberg actually starts showing up on the ballot?
Well, what we've already seen in the Democratic primary is that as he's gone around the country,
he has been able to reliably find important partners to appear with him or host him who
have often benefited from his philanthropy or his political spending in the past. Take the San Francisco Bay Area. You have had just in that
one metro, Mike Bloomberg has spent on school board races, on ballot initiatives to tax soda
and ban e-cigarettes. That's all political spending. And from his philanthropy. He has given out dozens of grants to museums
and dance companies and climate organizations. And the mayor of San Francisco, one of the most
prominent politicians in the state, has endorsed him for president. Now, we can't say that Mayor
London Breed endorsed Mike Bloomberg just because he has put all this money into San Francisco.
But for a mayor who's thinking about who to support,
it's just an inescapable factor to think about,
that this is a guy who has underwritten
not just politicians here,
but other institutions that make up
kind of the civic and cultural backbone of the city.
None of the other candidates is really competing
for this kind of support right now in the same way, because they have been tied up in Iowa, New Hampshire, and now Nevada and South Carolina.
And when they have been doing that, Mike Bloomberg has been jumping across the country on a private jet, meeting with prominent local officials, many of them prominent African-American officials, to ask them to consider supporting his campaign.
And he has
done that actually with quite a bit of success so far. And why is it important that he's cultivating
Black elected officials? I think there are two big reasons. One of them is that his own record
as mayor is going to be troubling to a lot of African-American voters. His policies on law
enforcement, his view of invasive searches largely targeting
Black and Hispanic men.
Stop and frisk.
Stop and frisk.
So if he is going to reassure African Americans, who are the cornerstone of the Democratic
Party, that he's an acceptable candidate, he needs to convince leaders within the Black
community to help him make that case.
Well, good morning. For all our guests, welcome to Stockton. My name is Michael Tubbs. I have
the honor of being the mayor of the great city of Stockton. I'm excited.
When I was in California with Bloomberg late last year, he got the endorsement of the young
Black mayor of Stockton.
We have to have a cabinet with the record,
with the resources,
and the relationships to not just make sure we beat Donald Trump,
but make sure something like Donald Trump
never happens again.
who is a very progressive guy
on basically everything,
who stood next to Bloomberg
and, when they got a question about stop-and-frisk,
said, I think we all recognize now in 2019 about stop-and-frisk, said,
I think we all recognize now in 2019 that stop-and-frisk is not a good policy.
It's terrible. Courts have decided, he's apologized, he's moved on.
I think two things for me. Number one, if you look at every candidate in the field,
there's an issue with criminal justice.
You have folks who wrote the 94 Crime Bill, which created mass incarceration.
You have folks who voted for the 94 Crime Bill.
You have folks who supported Ronald Reagan.
So there's not a candidate in 2019
who had a criminal
justice record. That's where we are today.
But I think the sign of a good leader is one who...
Nobody in this campaign has a perfect record
on law enforcement, and Mike Bloomberg
has the resources and the record to
defeat President Trump.
I want to pause on this because for a black
mayor to be asked about stop and frisk and to say
no one's perfect, the reason that
would seem quite striking
is that stop and frisk was a policing
policy deemed unconstitutional
as practiced in New York
under the Bloomberg administration that
disproportionately targeted black
and Latino men and by many accounts
not just humiliated them,
but kind of generationally scarred the Black community in New York.
Right. And it might get tougher as you see more and more video and audio
of Mike Bloomberg talking about stop and frisk, as we have seen in the last few days.
A scratchy recording of former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg
has been circulating on social media since Tuesday,
appearing to show the billionaire presidential candidate defending the city's stop and frisk policy in starkly racial terms.
Quote, we put all the cops in minority neighborhoods. Yes, that's true.
Why do we do it? Because that's where all the crime is. A lot of these mayors don't particularly want
to be on the hook for defending every offensive or divisive turn of phrase that Mike Bloomberg
has used over the years. But at least on the surface level, there have been enough signals
of reassurance. He has apologized for the policy that these mayors who see him as an ally on a
whole lot of other things
have been willing to get on his side in the primary.
Because the only path for a moderate candidate to the Democratic nomination is at least with
some significant support from Black voters. Right now, one of the biggest questions in the race
is whether Joe Biden is going to hang on to the support that he has had from African-Americans all along, or whether as he struggles in these largely white early states, those voters are going to look elsewhere.
And what Mike Bloomberg.
It's being able to indicate or explicitly say that he has been their friend on a lot of other things.
And a lot of other things can involve gun control.
It can involve public education or public health.
But a whole lot of that comes out of the activities of Mike Bloomberg's foundation and the activities of his political vehicles.
So this is what you were talking about earlier, Alex, this dilemma that Democrats are facing.
It's the same one that progressive groups have been facing for years, groups like Center for American Progress.
progressive groups have been facing for years, groups like Center for American Progress,
how much can they overlook in terms of Mike Bloomberg's record in exchange for getting this extraordinary financial support in causes that they believe in and that he believes in?
Right. If you believe that the Democratic Party is a party deeply concerned about economic inequality and about
the disproportionate concentration of wealth and power in the hands of a small number of people,
it seems really incongruous to think that Mike Bloomberg could be a plausible candidate
for the nomination, even setting aside issues like stop and frisk or his conduct with women.
setting aside issues like stop and frisk or his conduct with women. But, but for a lot of Democratic voters in an election that they regard as a national emergency, if the only question is
who can beat Trump, people are at least apparently open to the idea that a guy with $60 billion
who has shown that he knows how to use it might be that
candidate. And not just a billionaire willing to use that money, but a billionaire who represents
their agenda, right? I mean, there has for a long time been this anxiety within the Democratic
Party, within progressive America over concentration of wealth, over the power of the oligarchy. But if the oligarch is their oligarch
and spends all his money on their causes, then that really, really complicates this, right?
Absolutely. He has put before Democratic voters a pretty clear proposition, which is that on the
one hand, they may be offended by his wealth and a number of other things about him. But if they're offended by his wealth, do they care more about that or about climate change, which he has used
his wealth to try to address? In some ways, it's not a perfect comparison, but you could think
about it as related to the choice that Republican voters made in embracing Donald Trump. This was a guy who, in almost every outward respect,
should have been completely offensive
to socially conservative voters
who ultimately embraced him.
And they embraced him because they decided
if we are going to live in this morally degraded,
libertine country where our values are under assault,
well, this guy may be a Hollywood celebrity libertine, but he is our Hollywood celebrity
libertine. Right. There's a pragmatism to it. He was going to do their bidding and effectively has
when it comes to things like conservative judges on the Supreme Court. Absolutely. So if you're
convinced that your best option to save the Supreme Court,
to deal with climate change,
to deal with gun violence,
is by embracing a guy
who's just going to buy his way
to victory on that stuff,
well, buying your way to victory
might be a more desirable proposition than losing.
You know, it strikes me
that this would become an even more complicated issue
if Bloomberg,
and this is by no means
assured, in fact, it still seems quite improbable, but who knows, if he becomes a nominee and
becomes president.
Because then you would have a president who would be among the nation's premier philanthropists,
political donors, and there would always be a question hovering over why someone supports
him, why someone is endorsing his legislation, showing up at the White House for a signing ceremony, right? And there would always be this sense that he would probably level internal opposition within the world of the Democrats because they would want access to his money.
access to his money.
And potentially level opposition on the other side too,
because we've never had a president who was willing and able to say,
if you vote for my bill,
I will help you win re-election.
And if you don't,
I will spend $100 million trying to defeat you.
And his message would be,
yeah, I'm really rich,
so you just have to trust me and you have to trust my moral compass.
It's what's in his ads that we've been talking about.
He's putting it in front of people right now, this idea that he's a self-made billionaire who has put that money to causes that you, the Democratic primary electorate, care about.
It doesn't take some great feat of imagination to get voters thinking about
what that would mean in the general election and what that could mean for a president.
Thank you, Alex.
Thank you.
$60 billion can buy you a lot of advertising, but it can't erase your record.
There's a lot to talk about Michael Bloomberg.
You're now, you all are going to start...
Over the weekend, after largely ignoring Mike Bloomberg for weeks,
the top Democratic presidential candidates, including Joe Biden on Meet the Press,
began attacking him for his past statements and policies, especially stop-and-frisk.
His position on issues relating to the African-American community,
from stop-and-frisk to the way he talked about Obama.
At a rally in Las Vegas, Bernie Sanders delivered a similar attack.
Regardless of how much money a multi-billionaire candidate is willing to spend on his election,
we will not create the energy and excitement we need to defeat Donald Trump if that candidate
pursued, advocated for, and enacted racist policies like stop and frisk,
which caused communities of color in his city to live in fear.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
More than 1,000 former federal prosecutors and Justice Department officials are calling on Attorney General William Barr to resign over his intervention in the sentencing of Roger Stone, a friend of the president's who was convicted of lying to Congress. In a letter released over the weekend,
the officials accused Barr and Trump of, quote,
interference in the fair administration of justice.
Federal prosecutors had originally recommended a sentence of seven to nine years for Stone,
prompting Trump to lash out at the Department of Justice
and Barr to overrule the prosecutors and seek a shorter sentence.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Bavaro.
See you tomorrow.