NewsMax Media -- America's News Page  

Politics

RSS ARCHIVE
Print Page  |  Forward Page  |  E-mail Us

Bloomberg: Nader Should Run if He Wants



NEW YORK -- New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who might launch his own independent presidential bid, on Monday defended Ralph Nader's right to seek the White House.

"This business of Ralph Nader being a spoiler _ you know, in any three-way race, two of the three are going to be spoilers," Bloomberg said. "Come on. Everybody's got a right to do it _ you're not spoiling anything."

"If people want to vote for you, let them vote for you, and why shouldn't they?" he added.

The billionaire mayor denies he is exploring his own presidential bid, but aides and operatives have been working behind the scenes to lay the groundwork for an independent campaign.

Without the need to raise money, Bloomberg has been able to delay a decision much longer than most candidates.

Many Bloomberg watchers have been eyeing March 5 _ next Wednesday _ as a key date in his timetable because it is the first day that he would be able to start a petition drive to get on the ballot in Texas, which has one of the earliest deadlines and some of the toughest requirements for independents.

Asked Monday whether it's too late for third-party candidates to be entering the race, Bloomberg gave a long answer that showed he is well-informed about the intricacies of ballot access rules.

"It's getting close to being too late," Bloomberg said Monday. "It would take a lot of money, which Ralph Nader doesn't have, to get on all the ballots ... some states make it difficult, some states make it easier."

Still, he said, Nader has every right to try.

"I've just never understood why, just because you're a member of a party, you have special rights," Bloomberg said. "That's not the civics that I learned in junior high school, and if Ralph Nader wants to run, good luck to him."

In recent months, Bloomberg has sought the advice of ballot access experts such as Clay Mulford, who served as campaign manager for another wealthy third-party candidate, H. Ross Perot.

Bloomberg associates told The Associated Press this month that the mayor may end up launching petition drives in a handful of states before he has made a final determination about whether to run.

© 2008 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Print Page  |  Forward Page  |  E-mail Us


Related Links:


Top News