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Michael Bloomberg

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Michael Rubens "Mike" Bloomberg (born February 14, 1942) is a businessman and mayor of New York City.

Bloomberg was born and raised in Medford, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston. He made his fortune selling financial information terminals to Wall Street firms. Bloomberg L.P also began a radio network (the flagship station is 1130 WBBR-AM in New York City). Prior to founding the company, he was general partner at Salomon Brothers, where he headed equity trading, sales and, later, systems development.

Mr. Bloomberg is among the world's richest people, with a net worth approaching $5 billion.

Michael Bloomberg is a member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. He graduated from Johns Hopkins University in 1964 with a BS in electrical engineering and from Harvard University with a Master of Business Administration degree. Bloomberg has since donated $100 million to Johns Hopkins University, as well as serving as the chairman of the board of the university from 1996 to 2002.

He has written an autobiography, Bloomberg by Bloomberg (1997, ISBN 0471155454).

Bloomberg is a non practicing Jew.

His daughter Georgina Bloomberg is featured in Born Rich, a documentary about the children of the extremely wealthy.

Table of contents
1 Mayor of New York
2 See also
3 External links

Mayor of New York

In 2001 he was elected mayor, succeeding Rudy Giuliani, who—despite increased popular sentiment for a third term following the September 11 terrorist attacks—was required to leave office because of term limits. Bloomberg, a lifelong Democrat, ran for mayor as a Republican (or Republican In Name Only), reportedly to avoid the crowded field in the Democratic primary. He defeated Herman Badillo in the Republican primary to go on to the general election.

In the general election he also had the ballot line of the Independence Party. With Giuliani's endorsement, he defeated the Democratic candidate, Mark J. Green, by 50%-48%.

Among his political positions and policies:

"My personal opinion is that anybody should be allowed to marry anybody. I don't happen to think we should put restrictions on who you should marry.... What the city doesn't want to have happen is people getting a marriage license and then six months, or one year later, or two years later, finding out it's meaningless" [1] Bloomberg will be up for re-election in 2005. In late 2004 or early 2005, he gave the Independence Party $250,000 to fund a phone bank seeking to recruit volunteers for his re-election campaign. [1]

The principal contenders for the Democratic nomination to oppose Bloomberg are former Bronx Borough President Fernando Ferrer, Manhattan Borough President C. Virginia Fields, U.S. Representative Anthony Weiner, and City Council Speaker Gifford Miller. Bloomberg also faces some opposition from Republicans in possible primary challenges from former City Councilman Tom Ognibene and investment banker Steve Shaw.

See also

Election results for mayor of New York

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External links



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