Mayor Bloomberg took his charm offensive to the airwaves Sunday, appearing on NBC’s “Meet the Press” to praise President Obama’s stimulus plan and economic management – and even giving him cover to raise taxes on the middle class.
“The president has to deal with the reality, and some of the things are beyond his control,” Bloomberg said. “He makes commitments and he tries to live up to them, and I think the courage of being able to say, ‘Look, the world is different than I anticipated or what it was before, and I’m going to have to face that,’ it’s fine.”
“It does not mean that he’s going to have to raise taxes on the middle class,” the mayor quickly added.
He appeared alongside Newark Mayor Cory Booker to say Obama’s stimulus plan has helped the mindset of the American economy – even though its practical effects are still lagging.
“The main thing the stimulus program has done so far, however, is given the country hope that there will be more economic activity down the road, because most of the stimulus money hasn’t been spent yet,” Bloomberg said. “We do have a crisis of confidence, and I think this president can look back on six months in office and say, ‘I’ve gotten the country a little bit through that. I’ve given them some hope.’ We still have a long ways to go.”
When host David Gregory asked whether Bloomberg was disappointed Obama has not done more to tighten gun laws – a top issue for Bloomberg and Booker – Hizzoner gave the president a pass.
“No, but I’m certainly going to urge him to do so,” Bloomberg said. “I’ll certainly urge everybody. This isn’t a battle where you want to assign blame.”
Bloomberg has refused to say whether he voted for Obama last fall, and he was reportedly one of Sen. John McCain’s top candidates to run for vice president as a Republican. Yet he has gone out of his way to praise Obama this year as he runs for a third term against Controller William Thompson, an African-American Democrat.
Asked about the campaign, Bloomberg cast himself as a reformer, saying some people will vote against him because they say, “I want to have a political environment where I can get my friend appointed, or I don’t want to change something because it’s worked and I’m comfortable with it.”
Bloomberg laughed when Gregory asked whether he would shave his head in the style Booker and Washington, D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty favor.
“My hair is falling out at sufficient rate that I won’t have to shave it,” Bloomberg said. “It’s going to be gone.”He looked less comfortable a moment later.
Booker, who has endorsed Blooomberg’s reelection bid, was trying to portray him as a centrist. But Booker twice called him a Republican, a label Bloomberg has tried to shake despite running on the GOP line.
“I have endorsed Mayor Bloomberg. He’s a Republican. We cast our country too simplistically in left-right debates. He’s been a leader in bringing America together,” Booker said, as Bloomberg stared at him. “I’m proud to sit here with a Republican, because that’s the only way our city’s going to – our nation’s going to – move forward, is left and right working together.”
(Source: NY Daily News)
7 Responses
I know there have been a lot of endorsements for Bloomberg from the frum community, but he is bleeding the middle class dry, funding projects that are NOT in our interests. There is also ENORMOUS waste at every level of government, in EVERY government agency, that is costing us Billions in unnecessary expense. STOP the waste Mr Mayor and let the middle class live!!! If you don’t, even the Frum community that is so planted in NY, will have no choice but to pick up and re-start new communities elsewhere!!!
To “give a green light” implies you are in charge, and the person you are giving a “green light” to is your subordinate. Mr. Bloomberg’s two accomplishments in life (leader of a financial services industry that is generally held in low regard these days, and mayor of a bankrupt city), and his having frequently deserted a political party whenever it is expedient, hardly put him in a position to do anything other than get on his knees and beg Mr. Obama for a favor.
It may be beyond Obama’s control, but it is not beyond the control of the citizens of the U.S.A.
A reason not to vote for Bloomberg.
Shaggy, I agree with you. I only wish there was a Republican conservative alternative to him in the primaries. He would get my vote. And Comptroller Thompson would be much, much worse.
3, the problem is that it IS within Obama’s control after all he doesnt have to spend our money like a drunken liberal.
I dont even think it’s a matter of conservatives versus liberals. Significant number of conservatives are non-existent, and the traditional, humanitarian-leaning liberals are also non-existent.
We seem to have an oligarchy run by plutocrats FOR the plutocrats. Bush or Obama, the rich get richer. No? There are countless examples to prove that point.
At least Pepsi and Coke are two distinct products. 99.99% of politicians are no different no matter how they are bottled.