NYC Mayor Bloomberg Resigns from GOP
NEW YORK (AP) _ New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg on Tuesday switched his party status from Republican to unaffiliated, a stunning move certain to be seen as a prelude to an independent presidential bid that would upend the 2008 race.
The billionaire
former CEO, who was a lifelong Democrat before he switched to the GOP for his
first mayoral run, said the change in voter registration does not mean he is
running for president.
"Although my
plans for the future haven't changed, I believe this brings my affiliation into
alignment with how I have led and will continue to lead our city," he said
in a statement.
Despite his coyness
about his aspirations, the mayor's decision to switch stokes speculation that
he will pursue the White House, challenging the Democratic and Republican
nominees with a legitimate and well-financed third-party bid.
Bloomberg has an
estimated worth of more than $5 billion and easily could underwrite a White
House run, much like Texas businessman Ross Perot in 1992. Bloomberg spent more
than $155 million for his two mayoral campaigns, including $85 million when he
won his second term in 2005.
The 65-year-old mayor
has fueled the presidential buzz with increasing out-of-state travel, including
New Hampshire last weekend; a greater focus on national issues and repeated
criticism of the partisan politics that dominate Washington.
"The politics of
partisanship and the resulting inaction and excuses have paralyzed
decision-making, primarily at the federal level, and the big issues of the day
are not being addressed, leaving our future in jeopardy," he said in a
speech Monday at the start of a University of Southern California conference
about the advantages of nonpartisan governing.
A Bloomberg entry
would roil the already volatile and wide-open race to succeed President Bush.
"If he runs,
this guarantees a Republican will be the next president of the United States.
The Democrats have to be shaking in their boots," said Greg Strimple, a
Republican strategist in New York who is unaligned in the race.
The belief among some
operatives is that Bloomberg's moderate positions would siphon votes from the
Democratic nominee. Others say it's not clear and his impact would depend on
the nominees.
Former Democratic
Party Chairman Donald Fowler said Bloomberg would be "a disturbing factor
to both parties," but the mayor would probably draw more Republican votes
simply because "Republicans are more disenchanted than Democrats."
"Democrats are
pretty happy with their candidates," Fowler said. "The Republicans
are absolutely in disarray."
He called Bloomberg
"an exceptionally capable guy" who is "hard-nosed and
accomplished," but argued that the obstacles for a third-party candidate
are so daunting that it would be nearly impossible for Bloomberg to win.
In 1992, Perot
captured 19 percent of the popular vote as Democrat Bill Clinton seized the
presidency from incumbent Republican President George H.W. Bush. Independent
Ralph Nader played the spoiler in the 2000 race, taking votes from Democrat Al
Gore in a disputed election won by President George W. Bush.
Most polls find
Bloomberg drawing votes from Republicans.
"He could have a
significant impact on the campaign," said independent pollster Scott
Rasmussen. "Nationally there's a significant segment of the electorate
that would give serious consideration to Bloomberg as a candidate."
Strategists say he
could mount a third-party campaign by stressing that he is a two-term mayor in
a Democratic city and that he built his reputation as a political independent,
social moderate and fiscal conservative.
Throughout his 51?2
years as mayor, Bloomberg has often been at odds with his party and Bush. He
supports gay marriage, abortion rights, gun control and stem cell research, and
raised property taxes to help solve a fiscal crisis after the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks.
But he never seemed
willing to part with the GOP completely, raising money for the 2004
presidential convention and contributing to Bush and other Republican
candidates.
Just last year, he
told a group of Manhattan Republicans about his run for mayor: "I couldn't
be prouder to run on the Republican ticket and be a Republican."
On most occasions,
Bloomberg has rolled his eyes at the suggestion that he might one day be a
presidential contestant. But during a holiday party with City Hall staffers
last December he performed a Bruce Springsteen rendition of "Born to
Run."
Appearing Monday at
Google Inc.'s California campus, Bloomberg teased questioners about a
presidential bid, refusing to rule out the prospect but repeating that he plans
to serve out his term through 2009. And he didn't debunk a report that he
talked about an independent presidential bid with former Sen. David Boren,
D-Okla.
Asked about a
hypothetical independent candidate entering the race, Bloomberg launched a
broad critique of the Bush administration and Congress and lamented the
presidential debates to date.
"I think the
country is in trouble," Bloomberg said, citing the war in Iraq and
America's declining standing globally.
"Our reputation
has been hurt very badly in the last few years," he said. "We've had
a go-it-alone mentality in a world where, because of communications and
transportation, you should be going exactly in the other direction."
His entry into the
campaign would give the presidential contest a decidedly New York flavor, with
Hillary Rodham Clinton, the New York senator on the Democratic side, and former
New York mayor Rudy Giuliani on the Republican.
Associated Press
writers Liz Sidoti, Jim Kuhnhenn and Libby Quaid in Washington contributed to
this report.
Copyright 2007 The
Associated Press.