Bloomberg Meets With Perot Campaign Chief
Clay Mulford Is Well-Versed In Third-Party Ballot Access
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New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg is framed by the American flag as he delivers his State of the City address, Thursday, Jan. 17, 2008, in the Queens borough of New York. Bloomberg, who's testing his nationwide bipartisan appeal, has outlined an agenda that draws from both sides of the aisle. (AP)
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Bloomberg met privately with Clay Mulford, who is well-versed in third-party ballot access and served as campaign manager for Perot, according to an individual close to the mayor. Perot sought the presidency in 1992 and 1996.
The lunch meeting with Mulford comes less than two months before Bloomberg would be able to start gathering signatures to get on the ballot and meet Texas' early deadline.
If Bloomberg wants a chance at winning the state's large slice of electoral votes - 34 - he would need to collect about 74,100 signatures by May 12, and could only begin petitioning there on March 5. Not only does he have a short window to petition, the signatures need to be from Texas residents who did not vote in a party primary.
Asked Friday about the significance of being in Texas, with its early ballot deadline, Bloomberg seemed irritated with the question, having said only a moment earlier that he is "not a candidate" despite all the calls for him to run.
"I just said, I'm not a candidate - it couldn't be clearer," he said. "Which of the words do you not understand? People have urged me to do it but I'm not a candidate."
Nonetheless, analysts are calling his new plan to extend a $1 billion property tax cut a shrewd political move if he does make a bid for the Oval Office.
Despite declining tax revenue from New York's troubled financial sector, the billionaire mayor said in his State of the City address on Thursday that the tax cut would be included in next week's preliminary budget plan.
Political analysts said his tax-cutting proposal could help his image with anti-tax proponents and show that he has confidence in the city's economy.
"He would be ... wanting to project an image that he's smart about running economic matters, which he would argue the country is going to be needing very much in the next couple of years," said Lee Miringoff, director of the Marist Institute for Public Opinion.
With his liberal stances on issues such as abortion rights and gay marriage, he could be hoping that continuing the property tax cut will help solidify his appeal with Republican voters.
Charles Brecher of the Citizens Budget Commission, a fiscal and government watchdog group, called the mayor's plan "responsible," saying that his proposed across-the-board cuts for all city agencies would help reverse recent spending increases.
In his address, Bloomberg said his administration's sound fiscal planning had allowed the city to prepare for a less-than-rosy economic outlook. He has already ordered agency heads to cut expenses by 2.5 percent this fiscal year and 5 percent the following year.
"During the sunny days, we prepaid debt, saved for retiree's health care and budgeted responsibly," he said. "When clouds started forming last year, working with the comptroller, we began to cut spending and freeze hiring."
Steven Cohen, a professor of public administration at Columbia University, praised the mayor's plan, saying taxes should not be raised in an economic downturn. The tax-cut plan should also help the mayor politically, Cohen said, although he does not believe the mayor will run for president.
"For the last quarter century, politicians who advocate raising taxes lose elections," he said.
The proposal must still make it through negotiations with the City Council.
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- Pakaal,
He''s learning how to get on the ballot, he''s not asking the guy to run his campaign.
This isn''t 1992 or 1996 and we know what we''re going to get with Hillary or Mccain so don''t count him out. - Reply to this comment
- On the other hand, Perot did very well when you consider what an absolute paranoid lunatic he was.
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Posted by candide777 at 07:29 PM : Jan 18, 2008
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Ross Perot won 27pct of the vote in Kansas the first time he ran. That was incredible for Kansas. - Reply to this comment
- A Democrat switched to Reublican switched to independent. Hmmm...that ought to shake up the race. I like Obama, but Bloomberg would make and interesting "none of the above" candidate. He is rich, so the Republicans ought to like him, and he is liberal socially, so the Democrats ought to like him.
So here is the election outcome...
The Democrats vote for Bloomberg
The Independents vote for Obama
and the Republicans stay home. - Reply to this comment
- If meeting with the guy who helped Ross Perot to his two losses back in the 90s is any indication, Bloomberg''''s "business acumen" isn''''t quite as brilliant as his hype would have us believe.
Posted by pakaal at 05:06 PM : Jan 18, 2008
On the other hand, Perot did very well when you consider what an absolute paranoid lunatic he was. - Reply to this comment
- If meeting with the guy who helped Ross Perot to his two losses back in the 90s is any indication, Bloomberg''s "business acumen" isn''t quite as brilliant as his hype would have us believe.
- Reply to this comment
- He needs to start a new party for real conservatives instead of the petty, lying, stealing, cheating religious hypocrites that control the party right now and keep any decent human being with a conscience from calling him or herself a republican.
- Reply to this comment

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