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	<title>Observer &#187; Will Bloomberg Run? Test-Markets Himself as Potential Mayor</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Will Bloomberg Run? Test-Markets Himself as Potential Mayor</title>
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		<title>Will Bloomberg Run? Test-Markets Himself as Potential Mayor</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2001/03/will-bloomberg-run-testmarkets-himself-as-potential-mayor-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Mar 2001 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2001/03/will-bloomberg-run-testmarkets-himself-as-potential-mayor-2/</link>
			<dc:creator>Greg Sargent</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2001/03/will-bloomberg-run-testmarkets-himself-as-potential-mayor-2/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Like any shrewd businessman, Michael Bloomberg knows the</p>
<p>importance of test-marketing a new product-especially if the product in</p>
<p>question happens to be himself. So Mr. Bloomberg, the billionaire media mogul</p>
<p>who is considering a run for Mayor on the Republican line, is conducting a</p>
<p>series of focus groups to determine, in part, whether New Yorkers will buy his</p>
<p>main selling point: that his experience as the founder of a global</p>
<p>financial-news service gives him the management experience necessary to run the</p>
<p>unwieldy enterprise known as City Hall.</p>
<p> Mr. Bloomberg has begun high-profile hiring in preparation</p>
<p>for a campaign has resigned as chairman of his company's board and has been</p>
<p>talking with academics and political insiders about public policy and the</p>
<p>mechanics of a citywide race. But some of the most important consultations are</p>
<p>taking place not in back rooms, but in a small auditorium on lower Fifth</p>
<p>Avenue. There, on a recent afternoon, three dozen New Yorkers gathered to watch</p>
<p>a videotape of Mr. Bloomberg as he explained his electoral rationale. Sitting</p>
<p>in a comfortable armchair in front of a calming backdrop of books, he answered</p>
<p>questions from an off-camera interrogator. As he spoke, each focus-group</p>
<p>participant used a small dial to register moment-by-moment reactions-approve,</p>
<p>turn right; disapprove, turn left-to Mr. Bloomberg's performance.</p>
<p> These sessions provide a glimpse of Mr. Bloomberg's</p>
<p>strategic deliberations as he weighs a run for City Hall. The question at the</p>
<p>core of Mr. Bloomberg's quasi-candidacy is this: Can he be the Jon Corzine of</p>
<p>New York City? Is it possible to do in New York what Mr. Corzine did in last</p>
<p>year's New Jersey Senate race-that is, spend gobs of personal wealth on a</p>
<p>campaign without being tarred as a vanity candidate?</p>
<p> At the Fifth Avenue focus-group session, which took place in</p>
<p>mid-February, Mr. Bloomberg's advisers test-marketed responses to the questions</p>
<p>he will inevitably face about his wealth, which is estimated at $4 billion.</p>
<p>According to a participant who reconstructed the scene for The Observer on condition of anonymity, Mr. Bloomberg's off-camera</p>
<p>inquisitor asked whether he thought New Yorkers would vote for a</p>
<p>businessman-candidate for Mayor.</p>
<p> Mr. Bloomberg's answer</p>
<p>suggests that he's trying to frame his Horatio Alger personal story-he is a</p>
<p>bookkeeper's son from a blue-collar suburb of Boston who went on to build an</p>
<p>immense media empire-to show that he is not out of touch with the everyday</p>
<p>concerns of voters. On the videotape, Mr. Bloomberg discussed his modest</p>
<p>background, his hard-working father, his early struggles to make money even</p>
<p>after being denied a credit line, his identification with struggling New</p>
<p>Yorkers and his belief in New York as a city of limitless opportunities. The</p>
<p>audience listened respectfully, dialing in their reactions for possible future</p>
<p>use by Mr. Bloomberg's strategists.</p>
<p> At another point, the participant recalled, Mr. Bloomberg</p>
<p>was asked to reveal his net worth. He said he wouldn't divulge an exact figure,</p>
<p>but the question was moot because he intended to leave his fortune to</p>
<p>charity-save for small trust funds for his two children.</p>
<p> "They have a candidate who's reluctant to announce his net</p>
<p>worth, and they think it will be raised against him," Republican consultant</p>
<p>Roger Stone said of Mr. Bloomberg's advisers. "The conventional wisdom is that</p>
<p>Corzine's money hurt him. They're trying to formulate a response."</p>
<p> The session was</p>
<p>revealing in other ways. The focus-group participant who spoke with The Observer said that in the video, Mr.</p>
<p>Bloomberg sounded conciliatory in talking about the Reverend Al Sharpton;</p>
<p>offered several ideas about keeping trucks out of midtown during peak traffic</p>
<p>hours; and recounted the history of several sexual-harassment lawsuits against</p>
<p>his company. (Two lawsuits were dismissed; the other was settled.)</p>
<p> On the latter issue, Mr. Bloomberg must have acquitted</p>
<p>himself well, because the audience apparently reacted positively to his</p>
<p>explanation. "When that segment was over," the focus-group participant</p>
<p>recalled, "a guy came in and said, 'I can't believe you guys didn't react</p>
<p>negatively!'"</p>
<p> William Cunningham, a veteran of New York's political wars</p>
<p>who serves as a senior adviser to Mr. Bloomberg, would not discuss the focus</p>
<p>group, which was conducted by Republican pollster Frank Luntz. Mr. Bloomberg</p>
<p>declined an Observer request for an</p>
<p>interview.</p>
<p> Mr. Cunningham said that Mr. Bloom-berg's wealth, far from</p>
<p>being a political liability, would be an asset. As a self-financed candidate,</p>
<p>he would not be indebted to traditional interest groups and power brokers. He</p>
<p>added that Mr. Bloomberg's lack of experience in city government was similar to</p>
<p>that of outgoing Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, who was a federal prosecutor who had</p>
<p>never held elective office before becoming Mayor in 1993. "One guy was a career</p>
<p>federal prosecutor; the other guy built a business," Mr. Cunningham said. "They</p>
<p>were both successful at what they did. If voters see that you're successful,</p>
<p>they will listen to what you have to say in a Mayoral race."</p>
<p> At the very least, Mr.</p>
<p>Bloomberg will command attention because he is an entertaining character. He is</p>
<p>a self-described liberal Democrat who changed his registration to Republican</p>
<p>rather than deal with a bruising, crowded Democratic primary. The 58-year-old</p>
<p>Mr. Bloomberg flies his own plane and helicopter and has gained a reputation as</p>
<p>a man about town and a patron of the arts. The headquarters of his media</p>
<p>empire, at East 59th Street and Park Avenue, resembles the deck of a busy space</p>
<p>station. More than 2,000 employees buzz around the building constantly, eating</p>
<p>for free in the company's food court or sitting in glass-enclosed conference</p>
<p>rooms. The building has no traditional, walled-in offices; even Mr. Bloomberg's</p>
<p>desk is out in the open on the 15th floor. The 7,000 employees who work in the</p>
<p>company's 79 offices around the globe carry electronic identification cards that make it possible for</p>
<p>managers to determine, with the click of computer button, their exact</p>
<p>whereabouts.</p>
<p> The company keeps the work environment verbally clean by</p>
<p>filtering curses and racial epithets out of internal e-mails between employees.</p>
<p>If you try to send an e-mail with a prohibited word-such as "asshole"-the</p>
<p>computer instantly shows a message: "The following word is considered to be</p>
<p>inappropriate in the context of business correspondence." ("Dick" is permitted</p>
<p>because it's a name, "wop" because it's a stock-ticker abbreviation for</p>
<p>Woodside Petroleum, and "bimbo" because it's the symbol for Grupo Bimbo, a</p>
<p>Mexican pastry company.)</p>
<p> Mr. Bloomberg has hired a team of well-known advisers to</p>
<p>help him if he decides to emerge from these high-tech surroundings into the</p>
<p>grubby world of New York politics. In addition to Mr. Luntz, he has enlisted</p>
<p>pollster Doug Schoen; Maureen Connelly, a onetime adviser to former Mayor Ed</p>
<p>Koch; Kevin Sheeky, a onetime adviser to former Senator Daniel Patrick</p>
<p>Moynihan; and David Garth, the legendary consultant.</p>
<p> "The first time I met with Bloomberg, close to a year ago, he</p>
<p>asked me whether he had a chance," said Mr. Koch. "I said no. But now, based on</p>
<p>the way the other candidacies are going, I think he has a good chance. He can</p>
<p>run as a businessman who is going to keep the good things that Giuliani and</p>
<p>Koch did, and not let the city revert to the days of spending and radicalism."</p>
<p> Mr. Koch, who is supporting City Council Speaker Peter</p>
<p>Vallone, also told The Observer that</p>
<p>he would be open to supporting Mr. Bloomberg in a general election should Mr.</p>
<p>Vallone lose the Democratic Primary. "I'm not making any commitments," he said.</p>
<p> No Great Issue?</p>
<p> Not everyone agrees with Mr. Koch's assessment of Mr.</p>
<p>Bloomberg's chances. "I don't see him connecting with the public," said Fred</p>
<p>Siegel, a senior fellow at the Progressive Policy Institute, who advised Mr.</p>
<p>Giuliani during his successful 1993 Mayoral run. "I don't think he knows much</p>
<p>about the city. Why would we turn to someone not involved in city government?</p>
<p>There's no great issue right now that could propel an outsider candidate into Gracie</p>
<p>Mansion."</p>
<p> If history is any guide, Democrats lose control of City Hall</p>
<p>only in the wake of major demographic shifts or amid severe crises of</p>
<p>Democratic leadership. Mr. Giuliani won because the city seemed to be</p>
<p>collapsing amid disorder and civil unrest; the youthful John Lindsay won</p>
<p>because of population shifts that swelled the rolls of young and minority</p>
<p>voters; and Fiorello La Guardia rode to power amid a wave of revulsion at the</p>
<p>corruption of Tammany Hall. And neither La Guardia nor Lindsay-the only two</p>
<p>Republican Mayors besides Mr. Giuliani in the 20th century-groomed a Republican</p>
<p>heir-apparent. Lindsay, in fact, became a Democrat before leaving office.</p>
<p> Mr. Bloomberg's chances</p>
<p>could be further complicated by political machinations unfolding far away from</p>
<p>Mr. Bloomberg's midtown redoubt. Conservative Party chairman Michael Long, who</p>
<p>owns a liquor store in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, told The Observer that he is talking with several possible candidates</p>
<p>interested in running for Mayor as a Conservative. Mr. Long said that one of</p>
<p>the people under consideration is a conservative political pundit who "has been</p>
<p>on TV a number of times and who has some celebrity status."</p>
<p> Mr. Long declined to name his mystery candidate, but the New York Post reported on March 6 that National Review editor Richard Lowry is</p>
<p>considering a run. In past Mayoral elections, the Conservative Party candidate</p>
<p>has won up to 30,000 votes-a small number, considering that Mr. Giuliani</p>
<p>collected nearly 800,000 votes in 1997, but certainly enough to cut into Mr.</p>
<p>Bloomberg's support among Republicans. Mr. Long's opposition may have cost Mr.</p>
<p>Giuliani the extremely close 1989 election against David Dinkins, when the</p>
<p>Conservatives ran cosmetics heir Ron Lauder for Mayor. Mr. Giuliani overcame</p>
<p>opposition from the Conservative Party in 1993 thanks to overwhelming support</p>
<p>from disaffected outer-borough residents-a crowd that may not connect with Mr.</p>
<p>Bloomberg.</p>
<p> "I don't know if he</p>
<p>embraces Republican values," Mr. Long said of Mr. Bloomberg. "I don't know if he</p>
<p>possesses any core values. I would hope you possess some of the values of the</p>
<p>party you converted to. If he converted just for political expediency, it will</p>
<p>haunt him."</p>
<p> Perhaps not, because Mr.</p>
<p>Bloomberg most likely will run as a pragmatic, non-ideological Republican, one</p>
<p>who will keep government clean and continue Mr. Giuliani's managerial</p>
<p>successes. He may try to run on both the Republican and Liberal Party lines, as</p>
<p>Mr. Giuliani did, so he can position himself as a centrist even as the</p>
<p>Democrats compete for the left in their own hard-fought primary.</p>
<p> "I think that there's a center-right Giuliani constituency</p>
<p>that's still up for grabs-blue-collar ethnic Catholics, conservative Jews,</p>
<p>law-and-order voters-but it's more center than right," Mr. Stone, the Republican</p>
<p>consultant, said.</p>
<p> Mr. Bloomberg's quasi-candidacy is not about sounding grand</p>
<p>ideological themes so much as selling himself as a manager, as someone who</p>
<p>wants to offer incremental solutions to niggling, prosaic urban problems. For</p>
<p>instance, the focus-group participant said, Mr. Bloomberg talked about</p>
<p>relieving traffic congestion by imposing fees on trucks that come into the city</p>
<p>during peak traffic hours. On education, he suggested several novel, if</p>
<p>sketchy, ways for aggrieved parents to share their opinions of the school</p>
<p>system with education officials.</p>
<p> For his part, Mr. Bloomberg seems to have little patience</p>
<p>with the view that being Mayor is, as John Lindsay's reelection campaign of</p>
<p>1969 stated, the second-toughest job in America. Not long ago, he described the</p>
<p>job this way:</p>
<p> "It's getting everybody,</p>
<p>explaining it to them, holding their hands while they do it; it's picking the</p>
<p>right people, attracting good people; it's delegating to them; it's making sure</p>
<p>that they're coordinated and work together."</p>
<p> Nothing to it.</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Like any shrewd businessman, Michael Bloomberg knows the</p>
<p>importance of test-marketing a new product-especially if the product in</p>
<p>question happens to be himself. So Mr. Bloomberg, the billionaire media mogul</p>
<p>who is considering a run for Mayor on the Republican line, is conducting a</p>
<p>series of focus groups to determine, in part, whether New Yorkers will buy his</p>
<p>main selling point: that his experience as the founder of a global</p>
<p>financial-news service gives him the management experience necessary to run the</p>
<p>unwieldy enterprise known as City Hall.</p>
<p> Mr. Bloomberg has begun high-profile hiring in preparation</p>
<p>for a campaign has resigned as chairman of his company's board and has been</p>
<p>talking with academics and political insiders about public policy and the</p>
<p>mechanics of a citywide race. But some of the most important consultations are</p>
<p>taking place not in back rooms, but in a small auditorium on lower Fifth</p>
<p>Avenue. There, on a recent afternoon, three dozen New Yorkers gathered to watch</p>
<p>a videotape of Mr. Bloomberg as he explained his electoral rationale. Sitting</p>
<p>in a comfortable armchair in front of a calming backdrop of books, he answered</p>
<p>questions from an off-camera interrogator. As he spoke, each focus-group</p>
<p>participant used a small dial to register moment-by-moment reactions-approve,</p>
<p>turn right; disapprove, turn left-to Mr. Bloomberg's performance.</p>
<p> These sessions provide a glimpse of Mr. Bloomberg's</p>
<p>strategic deliberations as he weighs a run for City Hall. The question at the</p>
<p>core of Mr. Bloomberg's quasi-candidacy is this: Can he be the Jon Corzine of</p>
<p>New York City? Is it possible to do in New York what Mr. Corzine did in last</p>
<p>year's New Jersey Senate race-that is, spend gobs of personal wealth on a</p>
<p>campaign without being tarred as a vanity candidate?</p>
<p> At the Fifth Avenue focus-group session, which took place in</p>
<p>mid-February, Mr. Bloomberg's advisers test-marketed responses to the questions</p>
<p>he will inevitably face about his wealth, which is estimated at $4 billion.</p>
<p>According to a participant who reconstructed the scene for The Observer on condition of anonymity, Mr. Bloomberg's off-camera</p>
<p>inquisitor asked whether he thought New Yorkers would vote for a</p>
<p>businessman-candidate for Mayor.</p>
<p> Mr. Bloomberg's answer</p>
<p>suggests that he's trying to frame his Horatio Alger personal story-he is a</p>
<p>bookkeeper's son from a blue-collar suburb of Boston who went on to build an</p>
<p>immense media empire-to show that he is not out of touch with the everyday</p>
<p>concerns of voters. On the videotape, Mr. Bloomberg discussed his modest</p>
<p>background, his hard-working father, his early struggles to make money even</p>
<p>after being denied a credit line, his identification with struggling New</p>
<p>Yorkers and his belief in New York as a city of limitless opportunities. The</p>
<p>audience listened respectfully, dialing in their reactions for possible future</p>
<p>use by Mr. Bloomberg's strategists.</p>
<p> At another point, the participant recalled, Mr. Bloomberg</p>
<p>was asked to reveal his net worth. He said he wouldn't divulge an exact figure,</p>
<p>but the question was moot because he intended to leave his fortune to</p>
<p>charity-save for small trust funds for his two children.</p>
<p> "They have a candidate who's reluctant to announce his net</p>
<p>worth, and they think it will be raised against him," Republican consultant</p>
<p>Roger Stone said of Mr. Bloomberg's advisers. "The conventional wisdom is that</p>
<p>Corzine's money hurt him. They're trying to formulate a response."</p>
<p> The session was</p>
<p>revealing in other ways. The focus-group participant who spoke with The Observer said that in the video, Mr.</p>
<p>Bloomberg sounded conciliatory in talking about the Reverend Al Sharpton;</p>
<p>offered several ideas about keeping trucks out of midtown during peak traffic</p>
<p>hours; and recounted the history of several sexual-harassment lawsuits against</p>
<p>his company. (Two lawsuits were dismissed; the other was settled.)</p>
<p> On the latter issue, Mr. Bloomberg must have acquitted</p>
<p>himself well, because the audience apparently reacted positively to his</p>
<p>explanation. "When that segment was over," the focus-group participant</p>
<p>recalled, "a guy came in and said, 'I can't believe you guys didn't react</p>
<p>negatively!'"</p>
<p> William Cunningham, a veteran of New York's political wars</p>
<p>who serves as a senior adviser to Mr. Bloomberg, would not discuss the focus</p>
<p>group, which was conducted by Republican pollster Frank Luntz. Mr. Bloomberg</p>
<p>declined an Observer request for an</p>
<p>interview.</p>
<p> Mr. Cunningham said that Mr. Bloom-berg's wealth, far from</p>
<p>being a political liability, would be an asset. As a self-financed candidate,</p>
<p>he would not be indebted to traditional interest groups and power brokers. He</p>
<p>added that Mr. Bloomberg's lack of experience in city government was similar to</p>
<p>that of outgoing Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, who was a federal prosecutor who had</p>
<p>never held elective office before becoming Mayor in 1993. "One guy was a career</p>
<p>federal prosecutor; the other guy built a business," Mr. Cunningham said. "They</p>
<p>were both successful at what they did. If voters see that you're successful,</p>
<p>they will listen to what you have to say in a Mayoral race."</p>
<p> At the very least, Mr.</p>
<p>Bloomberg will command attention because he is an entertaining character. He is</p>
<p>a self-described liberal Democrat who changed his registration to Republican</p>
<p>rather than deal with a bruising, crowded Democratic primary. The 58-year-old</p>
<p>Mr. Bloomberg flies his own plane and helicopter and has gained a reputation as</p>
<p>a man about town and a patron of the arts. The headquarters of his media</p>
<p>empire, at East 59th Street and Park Avenue, resembles the deck of a busy space</p>
<p>station. More than 2,000 employees buzz around the building constantly, eating</p>
<p>for free in the company's food court or sitting in glass-enclosed conference</p>
<p>rooms. The building has no traditional, walled-in offices; even Mr. Bloomberg's</p>
<p>desk is out in the open on the 15th floor. The 7,000 employees who work in the</p>
<p>company's 79 offices around the globe carry electronic identification cards that make it possible for</p>
<p>managers to determine, with the click of computer button, their exact</p>
<p>whereabouts.</p>
<p> The company keeps the work environment verbally clean by</p>
<p>filtering curses and racial epithets out of internal e-mails between employees.</p>
<p>If you try to send an e-mail with a prohibited word-such as "asshole"-the</p>
<p>computer instantly shows a message: "The following word is considered to be</p>
<p>inappropriate in the context of business correspondence." ("Dick" is permitted</p>
<p>because it's a name, "wop" because it's a stock-ticker abbreviation for</p>
<p>Woodside Petroleum, and "bimbo" because it's the symbol for Grupo Bimbo, a</p>
<p>Mexican pastry company.)</p>
<p> Mr. Bloomberg has hired a team of well-known advisers to</p>
<p>help him if he decides to emerge from these high-tech surroundings into the</p>
<p>grubby world of New York politics. In addition to Mr. Luntz, he has enlisted</p>
<p>pollster Doug Schoen; Maureen Connelly, a onetime adviser to former Mayor Ed</p>
<p>Koch; Kevin Sheeky, a onetime adviser to former Senator Daniel Patrick</p>
<p>Moynihan; and David Garth, the legendary consultant.</p>
<p> "The first time I met with Bloomberg, close to a year ago, he</p>
<p>asked me whether he had a chance," said Mr. Koch. "I said no. But now, based on</p>
<p>the way the other candidacies are going, I think he has a good chance. He can</p>
<p>run as a businessman who is going to keep the good things that Giuliani and</p>
<p>Koch did, and not let the city revert to the days of spending and radicalism."</p>
<p> Mr. Koch, who is supporting City Council Speaker Peter</p>
<p>Vallone, also told The Observer that</p>
<p>he would be open to supporting Mr. Bloomberg in a general election should Mr.</p>
<p>Vallone lose the Democratic Primary. "I'm not making any commitments," he said.</p>
<p> No Great Issue?</p>
<p> Not everyone agrees with Mr. Koch's assessment of Mr.</p>
<p>Bloomberg's chances. "I don't see him connecting with the public," said Fred</p>
<p>Siegel, a senior fellow at the Progressive Policy Institute, who advised Mr.</p>
<p>Giuliani during his successful 1993 Mayoral run. "I don't think he knows much</p>
<p>about the city. Why would we turn to someone not involved in city government?</p>
<p>There's no great issue right now that could propel an outsider candidate into Gracie</p>
<p>Mansion."</p>
<p> If history is any guide, Democrats lose control of City Hall</p>
<p>only in the wake of major demographic shifts or amid severe crises of</p>
<p>Democratic leadership. Mr. Giuliani won because the city seemed to be</p>
<p>collapsing amid disorder and civil unrest; the youthful John Lindsay won</p>
<p>because of population shifts that swelled the rolls of young and minority</p>
<p>voters; and Fiorello La Guardia rode to power amid a wave of revulsion at the</p>
<p>corruption of Tammany Hall. And neither La Guardia nor Lindsay-the only two</p>
<p>Republican Mayors besides Mr. Giuliani in the 20th century-groomed a Republican</p>
<p>heir-apparent. Lindsay, in fact, became a Democrat before leaving office.</p>
<p> Mr. Bloomberg's chances</p>
<p>could be further complicated by political machinations unfolding far away from</p>
<p>Mr. Bloomberg's midtown redoubt. Conservative Party chairman Michael Long, who</p>
<p>owns a liquor store in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, told The Observer that he is talking with several possible candidates</p>
<p>interested in running for Mayor as a Conservative. Mr. Long said that one of</p>
<p>the people under consideration is a conservative political pundit who "has been</p>
<p>on TV a number of times and who has some celebrity status."</p>
<p> Mr. Long declined to name his mystery candidate, but the New York Post reported on March 6 that National Review editor Richard Lowry is</p>
<p>considering a run. In past Mayoral elections, the Conservative Party candidate</p>
<p>has won up to 30,000 votes-a small number, considering that Mr. Giuliani</p>
<p>collected nearly 800,000 votes in 1997, but certainly enough to cut into Mr.</p>
<p>Bloomberg's support among Republicans. Mr. Long's opposition may have cost Mr.</p>
<p>Giuliani the extremely close 1989 election against David Dinkins, when the</p>
<p>Conservatives ran cosmetics heir Ron Lauder for Mayor. Mr. Giuliani overcame</p>
<p>opposition from the Conservative Party in 1993 thanks to overwhelming support</p>
<p>from disaffected outer-borough residents-a crowd that may not connect with Mr.</p>
<p>Bloomberg.</p>
<p> "I don't know if he</p>
<p>embraces Republican values," Mr. Long said of Mr. Bloomberg. "I don't know if he</p>
<p>possesses any core values. I would hope you possess some of the values of the</p>
<p>party you converted to. If he converted just for political expediency, it will</p>
<p>haunt him."</p>
<p> Perhaps not, because Mr.</p>
<p>Bloomberg most likely will run as a pragmatic, non-ideological Republican, one</p>
<p>who will keep government clean and continue Mr. Giuliani's managerial</p>
<p>successes. He may try to run on both the Republican and Liberal Party lines, as</p>
<p>Mr. Giuliani did, so he can position himself as a centrist even as the</p>
<p>Democrats compete for the left in their own hard-fought primary.</p>
<p> "I think that there's a center-right Giuliani constituency</p>
<p>that's still up for grabs-blue-collar ethnic Catholics, conservative Jews,</p>
<p>law-and-order voters-but it's more center than right," Mr. Stone, the Republican</p>
<p>consultant, said.</p>
<p> Mr. Bloomberg's quasi-candidacy is not about sounding grand</p>
<p>ideological themes so much as selling himself as a manager, as someone who</p>
<p>wants to offer incremental solutions to niggling, prosaic urban problems. For</p>
<p>instance, the focus-group participant said, Mr. Bloomberg talked about</p>
<p>relieving traffic congestion by imposing fees on trucks that come into the city</p>
<p>during peak traffic hours. On education, he suggested several novel, if</p>
<p>sketchy, ways for aggrieved parents to share their opinions of the school</p>
<p>system with education officials.</p>
<p> For his part, Mr. Bloomberg seems to have little patience</p>
<p>with the view that being Mayor is, as John Lindsay's reelection campaign of</p>
<p>1969 stated, the second-toughest job in America. Not long ago, he described the</p>
<p>job this way:</p>
<p> "It's getting everybody,</p>
<p>explaining it to them, holding their hands while they do it; it's picking the</p>
<p>right people, attracting good people; it's delegating to them; it's making sure</p>
<p>that they're coordinated and work together."</p>
<p> Nothing to it.</p>
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