Bloomberg, unfazed by polls, looking to build 2020 campaign staff for possible run

Michael Bloomberg appears undeterred by his low poll numbers and is looking to beef up his nascent campaign staff as he moves close to a possible 2020 presidential run, FOX Business has learned.

In recent days, Bloomberg’s campaign office has begun the process of interviewing new staffers to work a presidential campaign that appears increasingly likely, according to people with direct knowledge of the matter. It’s unclear how many people Bloomberg is prepared to hire, or if he has extended any formal offers. But FOX Business has learned that his campaign office has met with several people with the intention of hiring several dozen advisers to complement the half-dozen campaign officials Bloomberg already has on staff, these people say.

The discussions suggest the former New York City mayor, Wall Street trader and founder of the eponymous news and financial data behemoth, Bloomberg LP, is leaning toward a formal announcement where he would compete to become the Democratic Party’s nominee to challenge President Trump in 2020. It also comes as polls show that the 77-year-old multibillionaire would face an uphill battle to win the nomination after he took steps toward entering the race recently by registering for the Alabama and Arkansas Democratic primaries late last week and earlier this week.

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Bloomberg himself has spoken about the difficulty he faces in winning as one of nearly two dozen potential Democratic candidates that include current frontrunners, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren and former Vice President Joe Biden. Bloomberg had initially stated he was sitting out the election, though FOX Business reported in late September that he had maintained a campaign office with a paid staff of about six people conducting polls for a still-possible run in 2020.

Indeed, Bloomberg himself has privately answered questions about his intentions to run by stating that the nomination will be difficult to win in a party that has a base dominated by progressives and anti-business populists who favor Warren and socialist Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, according to people with direct knowledge of the matter. But he has also said that his record as a fiscal conservative with ties to the business community and solid record as a moderate mayor makes him a better candidate to compete against Trump in the general election. “I probably can’t win the nomination but I think I can win the general,” Bloomberg told one person a couple of weeks ago.

It’s difficult to know what exactly has changed Bloomberg’s calculus that he is now taking overt steps toward entering the race, including interviewing people to greatly expand his campaign staff, as FOX Business has learned. One factor pushing Bloomberg to run: He is said to be concerned that a progressive like Warren won’t be able to defeat Trump in the general election given the strong state of the economy and her own far-left proposals. Warren has proposed massive spending programs like Medicare-for-all, high taxes and increased regulation on banks and technology companies.