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Michael Bloomberg
Michael Bloomberg
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Key Information

Michael Rubens Bloomberg (born February 14, 1942) is an American businessman and politician. He is the majority owner and co-founder of Bloomberg L.P., and was its CEO from 1981 to 2001 and again from 2014 to 2023.[1] He served as the 108th mayor of New York City for three terms, from 2002 to 2013, and was a candidate for the 2020 Democratic nomination for president of the United States.

Bloomberg grew up in Medford, Massachusetts, and graduated from Johns Hopkins University, in Baltimore, Maryland, and Harvard Business School in Boston, Massachusetts. He began his career at the securities brokerage firm Salomon Brothers before forming his own company in 1981. That company, Bloomberg L.P., is a financial information, software and media firm that is known for its Bloomberg Terminal. Bloomberg spent the next twenty years as its chairman and CEO. According to Forbes, as of May 2025, Bloomberg's estimated net worth stood at US$104.7 billion, making him the 18th richest individual in the world.[2] Bloomberg, who has signed the Giving Pledge, has given away $17.4 billion to philanthropic causes in his lifetime.[3] After a brief stint as a full-time philanthropist, he re-assumed the position of CEO at Bloomberg L.P. by the end of 2014.

Bloomberg was elected the 108th mayor of New York City in 2001. He held office for three consecutive terms, winning re-election in 2005 and 2009. Pursuing socially liberal and fiscally moderate policies, Bloomberg developed a technocratic managerial style.[4]

As the mayor of New York, Bloomberg established public charter schools, rebuilt urban infrastructure, and supported gun control, public health initiatives, and environmental protections. He also led a rezoning of large areas of the city, which facilitated massive and widespread new commercial and residential construction after the September 11 attacks. Bloomberg is considered to have had far-reaching influence on the politics, business sector, and culture of New York City during his three terms as mayor. He has also faced significant criticism for the city's stop and frisk program, support for which he reversed with an apology before his 2020 presidential run.[5]

In November 2019, four months before Super Tuesday, Bloomberg officially launched his campaign for the Democratic nomination for president of the United States in the 2020 election. He ended his campaign in March 2020, after having won only 61 delegates. Bloomberg self-funded $935 million for his candidacy, which set the record for the most expensive presidential primary campaign and highest spending in any political capacity by a single individual in U.S. history.[6] In 2024, Bloomberg received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Joe Biden.[7][8]

Early education

[edit]

Bloomberg was born on February 14, 1942, at St. Elizabeth's Hospital, in the Brighton neighborhood of Boston, to William Henry Bloomberg, a bookkeeper for a dairy company,[9] and Charlotte (née Rubens) Bloomberg.[10][11] His father never earned more than $6,000 a year.[12][13] William Henry Bloomberg died suddenly when his son was in college.[14] The Bloomberg Center at the Harvard Business School was named in William Henry's honor.[15][16] Bloomberg's family is Jewish,[17] and he is a member of the Temple Emanu-El in Manhattan.[18] Bloomberg's paternal grandfather, Rabbi Alexander "Elick" Bloomberg, was a Polish Jew.[19][20] Bloomberg's maternal grandfather, Max Rubens, was a Lithuanian Jewish immigrant from present-day Belarus, and his maternal grandmother was born in New York to Lithuanian Jewish parents.[21][22][23]

The family lived in Allston until Bloomberg was two years old, followed by Brookline, Massachusetts, for two years, finally settling in the Boston suburb of Medford, Massachusetts, where he lived until after he graduated from college.[24]

Bloomberg became an Eagle Scout when he was twelve years old.[25][26][27] He graduated from Medford High School in 1960.[28] He went on to attend Johns Hopkins University, where he joined the fraternity Phi Kappa Psi. While there, he constructed the blue jay costume for the university's mascot.[29][30] He graduated in 1964 with a Bachelor of Science in Engineering degree in electrical engineering.[31] In 1966, he graduated from Harvard Business School with a Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree.[32][33][34]

Bloomberg is a member of Kappa Beta Phi and Tau Beta Pi.[35] He wrote an autobiography, Bloomberg by Bloomberg, with help from Bloomberg News editor-in-chief Matthew Winkler.[36][37]

Business career

[edit]
A 2012 Bloomberg Terminal with a multi-monitor set-up composed of six screens

In 1966, Bloomberg was hired for a job earning $9,000 per year[38] at Salomon Brothers, a large Wall Street investment bank.[39] Salomon Brothers later promoted him to the equities desk.[38] Bloomberg became a general partner at Salomon Brothers in 1972; he headed equity trading and, later, systems development.[39] Phibro Corporation bought Salomon Brothers in 1981, and the new management fired Bloomberg, paying him $10 million for his equity in the firm.[40][41][42]

Using the money he received from Phibro, Bloomberg—having designed in-house computerized financial systems for Salomon—set up a data services company named Innovative Market Systems (IMS)[43] based on his belief that Wall Street would pay a premium for high-quality business information, delivered instantaneously on computer terminals in a variety of usable formats.[44] The company sold customized computer terminals that delivered real-time market data, financial calculations and other analytics to Wall Street firms. The terminal, first called the Market Master terminal, was released to market in December 1982.[45]

In 1986, IMS renamed itself Bloomberg L.P.[39] Over the years, ancillary products including Bloomberg News, Bloomberg Radio, Bloomberg Message, and Bloomberg Tradebook were launched.[46] Bloomberg, L.P. had revenues of approximately $10 billion in 2018.[43] As of 2019, the company has more than 325,000 terminal subscribers worldwide and employs 20,000 people in dozens of locations.[43]

When he left the position of CEO to pursue a political career as the mayor of New York City, Bloomberg was replaced by Lex Fenwick[47][48] and later by Daniel L. Doctoroff, after his initial service as deputy mayor under Bloomberg.[49] After completing his final term as the mayor of New York City, Bloomberg spent his first eight months out of office as a full-time philanthropist. In fall 2014, he announced that he would return to Bloomberg L.P. as CEO at the end of 2014,[50] succeeding Doctoroff, who had led the company since February 2008.[50][51][52] Bloomberg resigned as CEO of Bloomberg L.P. to run for president in 2019.[43]

In January 2024, John P. Angelos reached a $1.725 billion deal to sell the Baltimore Orioles to a group led by David Rubenstein. The group included Bloomberg, former Baltimore Mayor Kurt Schmoke, Cal Ripken, New York investment manager Michael Arougheti and NBA legend Grant Hill.[53][54][55]

Wealth

[edit]

In March 2009, Forbes reported Bloomberg's wealth at $16 billion, a gain of $4.5 billion over the previous year, the world's biggest increase in wealth from 2008 to 2009.[56] Bloomberg moved from 142nd to 17th in the Forbes list of the world's billionaires in only two years.[57][58] In the 2019 Forbes list of the world's billionaires, he was the ninth-richest person; his net worth was estimated at $55.5 billion.[59] In 2021, Bloomberg's net worth was estimated at $106 billion, ranking him 12th on Forbes' list of billionaires.[60]

Political career

[edit]

Mayor of New York City

[edit]
Bloomberg with President George W. Bush in 2003

Bloomberg assumed office as the 108th mayor of New York City on January 1, 2002.[61] He won re-election in 2005 and again in 2009.[62] As mayor, he initially struggled with approval ratings as low as 24 percent,[63] but he subsequently developed and maintained high approval ratings.[64] Bloomberg joined Rudy Giuliani, John Lindsay, and Fiorello La Guardia as re-elected Republican mayors in the mostly Democratic city.[65]

Bloomberg stated that he wanted public education reform to be the legacy of his first term and addressing poverty to be the legacy of his second.[66]

Bloomberg with President Barack Obama in 2012

Bloomberg chose to apply a statistical, metrics-based management approach to city government, and granted departmental commissioners' broad autonomy in their decision-making. Breaking with 190 years of tradition, he implemented what New York Times political reporter Adam Nagourney called a "bullpen" open office plan, similar to a Wall Street trading floor, in which dozens of aides and managerial staff are seated together in a large chamber. The design is intended to promote accountability and accessibility.[67]

Bloomberg accepted a remuneration of $1 annually in lieu of the mayoral salary.[68]

Bloomberg with presidents of Colombia, Chile, Peru and Mexico in 2014

As mayor, Bloomberg turned the city's $6 billion budget deficit into a $3 billion surplus, largely by raising property taxes.[69] Bloomberg increased city funding for the new development of affordable housing through a plan that created and preserved an estimated 160,000 affordable homes in the city.[70][71] In 2003, he implemented a successful smoking ban in all indoor workplaces, including bars and restaurants, and many other cities and states followed suit.[72] On December 5, 2006, New York City became the first city in the United States to ban trans-fat from all restaurants.[73] This went into effect in July 2008 and has since been adopted in many other cities and countries. Bloomberg created bicycle lanes, required chain restaurants to post calorie counts, and pedestrianized much of Times Square. In 2011, Bloomberg launched the NYC Young Men's Initiative, a $127 million initiative to support programs and policies designed to address disparities between young Black and Latino men and their peers, and personally donated $30 million to the project.[74] In 2010, Bloomberg supported the then-controversial Islamic complex near Ground Zero.[75]

Under the Bloomberg Administration, the New York City Police Department greatly expanded its stop and frisk program, with a sixfold increase in documented stops.[76] The policy was challenged in U.S. Federal Court, which ruled that the city's implementation of the policy violated citizens' rights under the Fourth Amendment of the Constitution and encouraged racial profiling.[77][78] Bloomberg's administration appealed the ruling; however, his successor, Mayor Bill de Blasio, dropped the appeal and allowed the ruling to take effect.[79] After the September 11 attacks, with assistance from the Central Intelligence Agency, Bloomberg's administration oversaw a controversial program that surveilled Muslim communities on the basis of their religion, ethnicity, and language.[80] The program was discontinued in 2014.[81]

In a January 2014 Quinnipiac poll, 64 percent of voters called Bloomberg's 12 years as mayor "mainly a success".[82]

Mayoral elections

[edit]

2001 election

[edit]

In 2001, New York's Republican mayor Rudy Giuliani, was ineligible for re-election due to the city's limit of two consecutive terms. Bloomberg, who had been a lifelong member of the Democratic Party, decided to run for mayor on the Republican ticket.[83] Voting in the primary began on the morning of September 11, 2001. The primary was postponed later that day, due to the September 11 attacks. In the rescheduled primary, Bloomberg defeated Herman Badillo, a former Democratic congressman, to become the Republican nominee. After a runoff, the Democratic nomination went to New York City Public Advocate Mark Green.

Bloomberg received Giuliani's endorsement to succeed him in the 2001 election. He also had a huge campaign spending advantage. Although New York City's campaign finance law restricts the total amount of contributions that a candidate can accept, Bloomberg chose not to use public funds and therefore his campaign was not subject to these restrictions. He spent $73 million of his own money on his campaign, outspending Green by a ratio of five to one.[84]

In the wake of the September 11 attacks, Bloomberg's administration made a successful bid to host the 2004 Republican National Convention. The convention drew thousands of protesters, among them New Yorkers against George W. Bush and the Bush administration's pursuit of the Iraq War.[85][86]

2005 election

[edit]

Bloomberg was re-elected mayor in November 2005 by a margin of 20 percent, the widest margin ever for a Republican mayor of New York City.[87] He spent almost $78 million on his campaign, exceeding the record of $74 million he spent on the previous election. In late 2004 or early 2005, Bloomberg gave the Independence Party of New York $250,000 to fund a phone bank seeking to recruit volunteers for his re-election campaign.[88]

Former Bronx Borough President Fernando Ferrer won the Democratic nomination to oppose Bloomberg in the general election. Thomas Ognibene sought to run against Bloomberg in the Republican Party's primary election.[89] The Bloomberg campaign successfully challenged the signatures Ognibene submitted to the Board of Elections to prevent Ognibene from appearing on ballots for the Republican primary.[89] Instead, Ognibene ran on only the Conservative Party ticket.[90] Ognibene accused Bloomberg of betraying Republican Party ideals, a feeling echoed by others.[91][92][93][94]

Bloomberg opposed the confirmation of John Roberts as Chief Justice of the United States.[95] Bloomberg is a staunch supporter of abortion rights and did not believe that Roberts was committed to maintaining Roe v. Wade.[95] In addition to Republican support, Bloomberg obtained the endorsements of several prominent Democrats: former Democratic mayor Ed Koch; former Democratic governor Hugh Carey; former Democratic City Council Speaker Peter Vallone, and his son, Councilman Peter Vallone Jr.; former Democratic Congressman Floyd Flake (who had previously endorsed Bloomberg in 2001), and Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz.[96]

2009 election

[edit]
Bloomberg in 2007

On October 2, 2008, Bloomberg announced he would seek to extend the city's term limits law and run for a third mayoral term in 2009. Bloomberg said, "Handling this financial crisis while strengthening essential services ... is a challenge I want to take on," Bloomberg said at a news conference. "So should the City Council vote to amend term limits, I plan to ask New Yorkers to look at my record of independent leadership and then decide if I have earned another term."[97]

Ronald Lauder, who campaigned for New York City's term limits in 1993 and spent over 4 million dollars of his own money to limit the maximum years a mayor could serve to eight years,[98] sided with Bloomberg and agreed to stay out of future legality issues.[99] In exchange, he was promised a seat on an influential city board by Bloomberg.[100]

Some people and organizations objected and NYPIRG filed a complaint with the City Conflict of Interest Board.[101] On October 23, 2008, the city council voted 29–22 in favor of extending the term limit to three consecutive four-year terms.[102] After two days of public hearings, Bloomberg signed the bill into law on November 3.[103]

Bloomberg's bid for a third term generated some controversy. Civil libertarians such as former New York Civil Liberties Union Director Norman Siegel and New York Civil Rights Coalition Executive Director Michael Meyers joined with local politicians to protest the process as undermining the democratic process.[104]

Bloomberg's opponent was Democratic and Working Families Party nominee Bill Thompson, who had been New York City Comptroller for the past eight years and before that, president of the New York City Board of Education.[105] Bloomberg defeated Thompson by a vote of 51 percent to 46 percent.[106] Bloomberg spent $109.2 million on his 2009 campaign, outspending Thompson by a margin of more than 11 to one.[107]

2013 election

[edit]

On September 13, 2013, Bloomberg announced that he would not endorse any of the candidates to succeed him.[108][109] On his radio show, he stated, "I don't want to do anything that complicates it for the next mayor. And that's one of the reasons I've decided I'm just not going to make an endorsement in the race." He added, "I want to make sure that person is ready to succeed, to take what we've done and build on that."[110]

Bloomberg with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in 2015

Bloomberg praised The New York Times for its endorsement of Christine Quinn and Joe Lhota as their favorite candidates in the Democratic and Republican primaries, respectively.[111][112] Quinn came in third in the Democratic primary and Lhota won the Republican primary. Bloomberg criticized Democratic mayoral candidate Bill de Blasio's campaign methods, which he initially called "racist"; Bloomberg later downplayed and partially retracted those remarks.[113][114]

On January 1, 2014, de Blasio became New York City's new mayor, succeeding Bloomberg.[115]

Post-mayoral political involvement

[edit]

Bloomberg was frequently mentioned as a possible centrist candidate for the presidential elections in 2008[116][117] and 2012, as well as for governor of New York in 2010[118] or vice-president in 2008.[119] He eventually declined to seek all of these offices.

In the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Sandy in November 2012, Bloomberg penned an op-ed officially endorsing Barack Obama for president, citing Obama's policies on climate change.[120][121]

2016 elections

[edit]
Bloomberg speaking at the 2016 Democratic National Convention

On January 23, 2016, it was reported that Bloomberg was again considering a presidential run, as an independent candidate in the 2016 election, if Bernie Sanders got the Democratic party nomination.[122][123][124][125][126] This was the first time he had officially confirmed he was considering a run.[127] Bloomberg supporters believed that Bloomberg could run as a centrist and capture many voters who were dissatisfied with the likely Democratic and Republican nominees.[128] However, on March 7, Bloomberg announced he would not be running for president.[129][130]

In July 2016, Bloomberg delivered a speech at the 2016 Democratic National Convention in which he called Hillary Clinton "the right choice."[131][132][133] Bloomberg warned of the dangers a Donald Trump presidency would pose. He said Trump "wants you to believe that we can solve our biggest problems by deporting Mexicans and shutting out Muslims. He wants you to believe that erecting trade barriers will bring back good jobs. He's wrong on both counts." Bloomberg also said Trump's economic plans "would make it harder for small businesses to compete" and would "erode our influence in the world." Trump responded to the speech by condemning Bloomberg in a series of tweets.[131][134]

2018 elections

[edit]

In June 2018, Bloomberg pledged $80 million to support Democratic congressional candidates in the 2018 election, with the goal of flipping control of the Republican-controlled House to Democrats. In a statement, Bloomberg said that Republican House leadership were "absolutely feckless" and had failed to govern responsibly. Bloomberg advisor Howard Wolfson was chosen to lead the effort, which was to target mainly suburban districts.[135] By early October, Bloomberg had committed more than $100 million to returning the House and Senate to Democratic power, fueling speculation about a presidential run in 2020.[136] On October 10, 2018, Bloomberg announced that he had returned to the Democratic Party.[137]

2020 presidential campaign

[edit]
Bloomberg's 2020 presidential campaign logo
Bloomberg at a campaign rally in Phoenix, Arizona, in February 2020

On March 5, 2019, Bloomberg announced that he would not run for president in 2020. Instead, he encouraged the Democratic Party to "nominate a Democrat who will be in the strongest position to defeat Donald Trump."[138] However, due to his dissatisfaction with the Democratic field, Bloomberg reconsidered. He officially launched his campaign for the 2020 Democratic nomination on November 24, 2019.[139]

Bloomberg self-funded his campaign from his personal fortune and did not accept campaign contributions.[140]

Bloomberg's campaign suffered from his lackluster performance in two televised debates.[141] When Bloomberg participated in his first presidential debate, Elizabeth Warren challenged him to release women from non-disclosure agreements relating to their allegations of sexual harassment at Bloomberg L.P. Two days later, Bloomberg announced that there were three women who had made complaints concerning him, and added that he would release any of the three if they requested.[142][143] Warren continued her attack in the second debate the next week. Others criticized Bloomberg for his wealth and campaign spending,[144][145] as well as his former affiliation with the Republican Party.[141]

As a late entrant to the race, Bloomberg skipped the first four state primaries and caucuses.[146] He spent $676 million of his personal fortune on the primary campaign, breaking a record for the most money ever spent on a presidential primary campaign.[146] His campaign blanketed the country with campaign advertisements on broadcast and cable television, the Internet, and radio,[147] as well as direct mail.[141] Bloomberg also spent heavily on campaign operations that grew to 200 field offices and more than 2,400 paid campaign staffers.[141] His support in nationwide opinion polls never exceeded 15 percent, but stagnated or dropped before Super Tuesday,[148] while former vice president Joe Biden became the frontrunner after receiving the support of major candidates Pete Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar. Bloomberg suspended his campaign on March 4, 2020, after a disappointing Super Tuesday in which he won only American Samoa, and subsequently endorsed Biden.[146][141] Bloomberg donated $18 million to the Democratic National Committee and publicly planned a "massive spending blitz" to support Biden's campaign.[149]

Bloomberg is sworn in as chair of the Defense Innovation Board in June 2022.

On March 1, a 60 Minutes correspondent remarked that Bloomberg had spent twice what President Trump had raised and asked how much he would continue to spend, Bloomberg replied, "I'm making an investment in this country. My investment is: I'm going to remove President Trump from 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue or at least try as hard as I can."[150]

Speaking on the final night of the 2020 Democratic National Convention, Bloomberg took aim at Trump's handling of the COVID-19 pandemic and the American economy: "Would you rehire or work for someone who ran your business into the ground? Who always does what's best for him or her, even when it hurts the company, and whose reckless decisions put you in danger, and who spends more time tweeting than working? If the answer is no, why the hell would we ever rehire Donald Trump for another four years?"[151][152][153]

Defense Innovation Board

[edit]

In February 2022, Bloomberg was nominated to chair the Defense Innovation Board, being sworn in on June 22, 2022.[154][155][156]

Political positions

[edit]
Bloomberg delivering a speech in 2004

Bloomberg was a Democrat until 2001, when he switched to the Republican Party to run for mayor. He switched to an independent in 2007, and registered again as a Democrat in October 2018.[157][158][159] In 2004, he endorsed the re-election of George W. Bush, and spoke at the 2004 Republican National Convention. He endorsed Barack Obama's re-election in 2012, endorsed Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election, and spoke at the 2016 Democratic National Convention.[160] In 2008, he did not make a presidential election endorsement, but he voted for Obama, according to a 2020 statement by "Stu Loeser, a Bloomberg [2020] campaign spokesman".[161]

As Mayor of New York, Bloomberg supported government initiatives in public health and welfare.[162][163][164] This included tobacco control efforts (including an increase in the legal age to purchase tobacco products, a ban on smoking in indoor workplaces, and an increase in the cigarette tax);[164][165] the elimination of the use of artificial trans fats in restaurants;[164] and bans on all flavored tobacco and e-cigarette products including menthol flavors.[166] Bloomberg also launched an unsuccessful effort to ban on certain large (more than 16 fluid ounce) sugary sodas at restaurants and food service establishments in the city.[164] These initiatives were supported by public health advocates,[164][167] but were criticized by some as "nanny state" policies.[168]

Over his career, Bloomberg has "mingled support for progressive causes with more conservative positions on law enforcement, business regulation, and school choice".[169] Bloomberg supports gun-control measures, abortion rights, same-sex marriage, and a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants.[162] He advocates for a public health insurance option that he has called "Medicare for all for people that are uncovered", rather than a universal single-payer healthcare system.[162] He is concerned about climate change, and has touted his mayoral efforts to reduce greenhouse gases.[170] Bloomberg supported the Iraq War, and opposed creating a timeline for withdrawing troops.[171][172] Bloomberg has sometimes embraced the use of surveillance in efforts to deter crime and protect the public against terrorism.[173][174]

During, and after,[175] his tenure, he was a staunch supporter of stop-and-frisk. In November 2019, Bloomberg apologized for supporting it.[176][177][175] He advocates reversing many of the Trump tax cuts. His own tax plan includes implementing a 5 percent surtax on incomes above $5 million a year, and would raise federal revenue by $5 trillion over a decade. He opposes a wealth tax, saying that it would likely be found unconstitutional.[178][179] He has also proposed more stringent financial regulations that include tougher oversight for big banks, a financial transactions tax, and stronger consumer protections.[180] He supported decreasing estate-tax threshold to collect more estate taxes and close tax avoidance schemes. According to ProPublica investigation, he set up multiple GRATs, thus shielding parts of his fortune for his heirs.[181]

Bloomberg stated that running as a Democrat – not an independent – was the only path he saw to defeating Donald Trump, saying: "In 2020, the great likelihood is that an independent would just split the anti-Trump vote and end up re-electing the President. That's a risk I refused to run in 2016, and we can't afford to run it now."[157]

In the 2020 general election, Bloomberg invested $115 million in Joe Biden's campaign in key states like Florida, Ohio, and Texas, contributed millions to various Democrats in local races, and raised over $16 million to clear court fines for nearly 32,000 Black and Hispanic Florida voters with felony convictions.[182][183][184] Bloomberg contributed $19 million to a pro-Biden super PAC in support of Biden's reelection in 2024.[185] In October 2024, Bloomberg contributed $50 million to support Kamala Harris's 2024 election campaign.[186]

Philanthropy

[edit]

In August 2010, Bloomberg signed The Giving Pledge, whereby the wealthy pledge to give away at least half of their wealth. In his lifetime, he has given away $17.4 billion overall including $3 billion in 2023, when he was America's highest giving philanthropist, according to Chronicle of Philanthropy.[3] He has been in the top ten on the publication's list of America's biggest donors since 2004.[187][188][189][3]

His Bloomberg Philanthropies foundation focuses on public health, the arts, government innovation, the environment, and education.[190][191] Through the foundation, he donated or pledged $767 million in 2018,[192][191][193] and more than $1 billion in 2019.[194]

In 2011, recipients included the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health; World Lung Foundation and the World Health Organization. According to The New York Times, Bloomberg was an "anonymous donor" to the Carnegie Corporation from 2001 to 2010, with gifts ranging from $5 million to $20 million each year.[195] The Carnegie Corporation distributed these contributions to hundreds of New York City organizations ranging from the Dance Theatre of Harlem to Gilda's Club, a non-profit organization that provides support to people and families living with cancer. He continues to support the arts through his foundation.[196]

Bloomberg gave $254 million in 2009 to almost 1,400 nonprofit organizations,[197] saying, "I am a big believer in giving it all away and have always said that the best financial planning ends with bouncing the check to the undertaker."[198][199]

COVID-19 response

[edit]

During the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic and its aftermath, Bloomberg through his foundation committed to a wide range of urgent causes including researching treatments and vaccines, leading contact tracing to root out the virus, supporting the World Health Organization, and funding global efforts to fight the spread of the disease and protect vulnerable populations. Action included:

  • Cofounding a $75 million fund for nonprofits impacted by COVID-19 in New York City[200]
  • Donating $6 million to World Central Kitchen to serve meals to health care workers in New York City[201]
  • Partnering with Johns Hopkins University to train COVID-19 contact tracers through its school of public health and search for a treatment of the virus.[202][203]
  • Convening mayors through a partnership with Harvard College to learn and discuss their pandemic response, featuring a bipartisan roster of speakers and attendees.[204][205]
  • Leading New York's contact tracing effort[206]
  • Launching an information and action sharing network for cities through the National League of Cities[207]
  • Supporting international efforts to combat the spread of COVID-19 and prepare regional leaders through the International Rescue Committee, the World Health Organization, Vital Strategies and other partners[208][209][210]

Environmental advocacy

[edit]

Bloomberg is an environmentalist and has advocated policy to fight climate change at least since he became the mayor of New York City. In September 2023, the New York Times called Bloomberg "perhaps the world's single largest funder of climate activism."[211] At the national level, Bloomberg has consistently pushed for transitioning the United States' energy mix from fossil fuels to clean energy. In July 2011, Bloomberg Philanthropies donated $50 million to Sierra Club's Beyond Coal campaign, allowing the campaign to expand its efforts to shut down coal-fired power plants from 15 states to 45 states.[212][213] In 2015, Bloomberg announced an additional $30 million contribution to the Beyond Coal initiative, matched with another $30 million by other donors, to help secure the retirement of half of America's fleet of coal plants by 2017.[214] In July 2017, Europe Beyond Coal was established to phase out use of coal on the continent by 2030.[215] Austria closed its final coal-fired plant in April 2020.[216] In early June 2019, Bloomberg pledged $500 million to reduce climate impacts and shut remaining coal-fired power plants by 2030 via the new Beyond Carbon initiative.[217][218] In September 2023, Bloomberg committed another $500 million to Beyond Carbon to "finish the job on coal."[219][220]

Bloomberg Philanthropies awarded a $6 million grant to the Environmental Defense Fund in support of strict regulations on fracking in the 14 states with the heaviest natural gas production.[221]

In 2013, Bloomberg and Bloomberg Philanthropies launched the Risky Business initiative with former Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson and hedge-fund billionaire Tom Steyer. The joint effort worked to convince the business community of the need for more sustainable energy and development policies, by quantifying and publicizing the economic risks the United States faces from the impact of climate change.[222] In January 2015, Bloomberg led Bloomberg Philanthropies in a $48-million partnership with the Heising-Simons family to launch the Clean Energy Initiative. The initiative supports state-based solutions aimed at ensuring America has a clean, reliable, and affordable energy system.[223]

Since 2010, Bloomberg has taken an increasingly global role on environmental issues. From 2010 to 2013, he served as the chairman of the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group, a network of the world's biggest cities working together to reduce carbon emissions.[224] During his tenure, Bloomberg worked with President Bill Clinton to merge C40 with the Clinton Climate Initiative, with the goal of amplifying their efforts in the global fight against climate change worldwide.[225] He serves as the president of the board of C40 Cities.[226] In January 2014, Bloomberg began a five-year commitment totaling $53 million through Bloomberg Philanthropies to the Vibrant Oceans Initiative. The initiative partners Bloomberg Philanthropies with Oceana, Rare, and Encourage Capital to help reform fisheries and increase sustainable populations worldwide.[227] In 2018, Bloomberg joined Ray Dalio in announcing a commitment of $185 million towards protecting the oceans.[228]

In 2014, United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon appointed Bloomberg as his first Special Envoy for Cities and Climate Change to help the United Nations work with cities to prevent climate change.[229] In September 2014, Bloomberg convened with Ban and global leaders at the UN Climate Summit to announce definite action to fight climate change in 2015.[230] In 2018, Ban's successor António Guterres appointed Bloomberg as UN envoy for climate action.[231][232] He resigned in November 2019, in the run-up to his presidential campaign.[233] On 5 February 2021, however, he was re-appointed by Guterres as his Special Envoy on Climate Ambition and Solutions in the lead-up to the climate conference in Scotland scheduled for November 2021.[234]

In late 2014, Bloomberg, Ban Ki-moon, and global city networks ICLEI-Local Governments for Sustainability (ICLEI), C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group (C40) and United Cities and Local Governments (UCLG), with support from UN-Habitat, launched the Compact of Mayors, a global coalition of mayors and city officials pledging to reduce local greenhouse gas emissions, enhance climate resilience, and track their progress transparently.[235] To date, over 250 cities representing more than 300 million people worldwide and 4.1 percent of the total global population, have committed to the Compact of Mayors,[236] which was merged with the Covenant of Mayors in June 2016.[237][238]

In 2015, Bloomberg and Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo created the Climate Summit for Local Leaders.[239] which convened assembled hundreds of city leaders from around the world at Paris City Hall to discuss fighting climate change.[240][241][242] The Summit concluded with the presentation of the Paris Declaration, a pledge by leaders from assembled global cities to cut carbon emissions by 3.7 gigatons annually by 2030.[243]

During the 2015 UN Climate Change Conference in Paris, Mark Carney, Governor of the Bank of England and chair of the Financial Stability Board, announced that Bloomberg would lead a new global task force designed to help industry and financial markets understand the growing risks of climate change.[244]

Following President Donald Trump's announcement that the U.S. government would withdraw from the Paris climate accord, Bloomberg outlined a coalition of cities, states, universities and businesses that had come together to honor America's commitment under the agreement through 'America's Pledge'.[245] Bloomberg offered up to $15 million to the UNFCCC, the UN body that assists countries with climate change efforts.[246][247] About a month later, Bloomberg and California Governor Jerry Brown announced that the America's Pledge coalition would work to "quantify the actions taken by U.S. states, cities and business to drive down greenhouse gas emissions consistent with the goals of the Paris Agreement."[248][249] In announcing the initiative, Bloomberg said "the American government may have pulled out of the Paris agreement, but American society remains committed to it."[250] Two think tanks, World Resource Institute and the Rocky Mountain Institute, will work with America's Pledge to analyze the work cities, states and businesses do to meet the U.S. commitment to the Paris agreement.[251]

In May 2019, Bloomberg announced a 2020 Midwestern Collegiate Climate Summit in Washington University in St. Louis with the aim to bring together leaders from Midwestern universities, local government and the private sector to reduce climate impacts in the region.[252][253][254]

Expanding on the work of Beyond Coal and Beyond Carbon, Bloomberg launched Beyond Petrochemicals in September 2022. The campaign takes aim at the rapid expansion of U.S. petrochemicals and plastic pollution.[255] The $85 million campaign aims to block the construction of 120 proposed petrochemical projects in Louisiana, Texas and the Ohio River Valley.[211]

Bloomberg serves as global adviser to the winners of the Earthshot Prize. His foundation Bloomberg Philanthropies is a founding partner of the Prize which awards £1,000,000 to each of five winners each year whose work will achieve ambitious climate and sustainability goals by 2030.[256][257] The 2023 finalists were announced at the Earthshot Prize Innovation Summit in September 2023 in New York, and the five winners were announced in November 2023 in Singapore.[258][259]

Johns Hopkins University philanthropy

[edit]

As of 2024, Bloomberg has given more than $4.55 billion to Johns Hopkins University, his alma mater,[260][261] making him "the most generous living donor to any education institution in the United States."[262] His first contribution, in 1965, had been $5.[262] He made his first $1 million commitment to JHU in 1984, and subsequently became the first individual to exceed $1 billion in lifetime donations to a single U.S. institution of higher education.[263]

Bloomberg's contributions to Johns Hopkins "fueled major improvements in the university's reputation and rankings, its competitiveness for faculty and students, and the appearance of its campus,"[262] and included construction of a children's hospital (the Charlotte R. Bloomberg Children's Center Building, named after Bloomberg's mother); a physics building, a school of public health (the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health), libraries, and biomedical research facilities,[262] including the Institute for Cell Engineering, a stem-cell research institute within the School of Medicine, and the Malaria Research Institute within the School of Public Health.[262][263] In 2013, Bloomberg committed $350 million to Johns Hopkins, five-sevenths of which were allocated to the Bloomberg Distinguished Professorships.[263] In 2016, Bloomberg Philanthropies contributed $300 million to establish the Bloomberg American Health Initiative.[264] Bloomberg also funded the launch of the Bloomberg–Kimmel Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy within the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in East Baltimore, with a $50 million gift; an additional $50 million was given by philanthropist Sidney Kimmel, and $25 million by other donors.[265][266][267] It will support cancer therapy research, technology and infrastructure development, and private sector partnerships.[268] In 2016, Bloomberg joined Vice President Joe Biden for the institute's formal launch, embracing Biden's "Cancer Moonshot" initiative, which seeks to find a cure for cancer through national coordination of government and private sector resources.[265] In 2018, Bloomberg contributed a further gift of $1.8 billion to Johns Hopkins, allowing the university to practice need-blind admission and meet the full financial need of admitted students.[261]

In 2024, Bloomberg announced a $1 billion gift to Johns Hopkins University to make tuition free for all medical school students whose families make under $300,000 a year, beginning in the fall of 2024.[260] The donation also increased financial aid for students enrolled in nursing, public health and other graduate programs.[269]

Other educational and research philanthropy

[edit]

In 1996, Bloomberg endowed the William Henry Bloomberg Professorship at Harvard University with a $3 million gift in honor of his father, who died in 1963, saying, "throughout his life, he recognized the importance of reaching out to the nonprofit sector to help better the welfare of the entire community."[270]

In 2015, Bloomberg donated $100 million to Cornell Tech, the applied sciences graduate school of Cornell University on the school's Roosevelt Island campus.[271] Through Bloomberg Philanthropies, Bloomberg established the American Talent Initiative in 2016 which is committed to increasing the number of lower-income high-achieving students attending elite colleges.[272][273] Bloomberg Philanthropies also supports CollegePoint which has provided advising to lower- and moderate-income high school students since 2014.[274] In 2016, the Museum of Science, Boston announced a $50 million gift from Bloomberg.[275] Bloomberg credited the museum with sparking his intellectual curiosity as a patron and student during his youth in Medford, Massachusetts.[276] It is the largest donation in the museum's 186-year history.[277][278]

Bloomberg donated $100 million to America's four Historically Black Medical Schools in 2020 as part of Bloomberg Philanthropies' Greenwood Initiative, which tackles the racial wealth gap and addresses decades of underinvestment in Black communities.[279][280][281] The gift to Meharry Medical College, Howard University College of Medicine, Morehouse School of Medicine and Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science provided grants to reduce debt for students, meaning many medical students enrolled at the time and for the four years to follow would graduate free of debt.[282][283]

In April 2022, Bloomberg announced two separate $100 million donations, one to Harlem Children’s Zone’s Promise Academy and another to Success Academy Charter Schools.[284]

In 2024, Bloomberg again made a donation to the nation's Historically Black Medical Schools — this time gifting $600 million to the four schools to support their endowments.[285] The New York Times reported the endowments were "significantly underfunded" due to entrenched discrimination[286], but Bloomberg's gift was expected to increase three of the schools' endowment sizes by more than 100%.[287] The donation also included $5 million to help Xavier University to establish a new medical school.[287]

Urban innovation philanthropy

[edit]

In July 2011, Bloomberg launched a $24 million initiative to fund "Innovation Delivery Teams" in five cities. The teams are one of Bloomberg Philanthropies' key goals: advancing government innovation.[288] In December 2011, Bloomberg Philanthropies launched a partnership with online ticket search engine SeatGeek to connect artists with new audiences. Called the Discover New York Arts Project, the project includes organizations HERE, New York Theatre Workshop, and the Kaufman Center.[289]

In 2013, Bloomberg announced the Mayors Challenge competition to drive innovation in American cities. The program was later expanded to competitions in Latin America and Europe.[290][291]

In 2016, Bloomberg gave Harvard $32 million to create the Bloomberg Harvard City Leadership Initiative within Harvard Kennedy School's Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation; the initiative provides training to mayors and their aides on innovative municipal leadership and challenges facing cities.[292][293][294][295] Since its founding, 275 mayors and more than 400 top city aides have gone through the program, prompting Time Magazine to call Bloomberg 'the nation's mayoral tutor.'[296]

In March 2021, Bloomberg gave Harvard $150 million to create the Bloomberg Center for Cities to support mayors.[297]

Tobacco, gun control and public health

[edit]
Bloomberg speaking at an Everytown for Gun Safety event in August 2019

Bloomberg has been a longtime donor to global tobacco control efforts.[298][299] Bloomberg has donated close to $1 billion to the World Health Organization (WHO) to promote anti-smoking efforts, including $125 million in 2006, $250 million in 2008, and $360 million, making Bloomberg Philanthropies the developing world's biggest funder of tobacco-control initiatives.[299] In 2013, it was reported that Bloomberg had donated $109.24 million in 556 grants and 61 countries to campaigns against tobacco.[300] Bloomberg's contributions are aimed at "getting countries to monitor tobacco use, introduce strong tobacco-control laws, and create mass media campaigns to educate the public about the dangers of tobacco use."[299] Bloomberg Philanthropies and the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids jointly launched a $160 million, three-year campaign against youth use of electronic cigarettes (vaping).[301]

Bloomberg is the co-founder of Everytown for Gun Safety (formerly Mayors Against Illegal Guns), a gun control advocacy group.[302]

In 2016, the World Health Organization appointed Bloomberg as its Global Ambassador for Noncommunicable Diseases.[303][304][305]

National September 11 Memorial and Museum

[edit]

In October 2006, Bloomberg became chairman of the board and chief fundraiser of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum; CBS News and Politico credited him with having resolved financial and design obstacles that delayed its completion.[306][307][308] He was mayor during the initial planning stages of the memorial & museum.[308] Once he assumed the Chairmanship, he sought to reduce cost increases, finalize fundraising efforts, and resume the mapping and design processes.[306][309] Bloomberg has raised $450 million for the National September 11 Memorial & Museum,[310] including a $50 million personal contribution, making him its largest single donor.[306][308][311] Bloomberg secured donations from major corporations by saying they held some responsibility as members of the global community.[306] One of his first acts as chairman was securing a $10 million donation from American Express.[306] Bloomberg recruited members to the board and donations across the political spectrum, including David Koch and Jon Stewart.[306] Bloomberg is also chairman of the Perelman Performing Arts Center in the World Trade Center complex,[312] to which he has donated $130 million.[313]

At the ceremony opening for the National September 11 Memorial Museum, Bloomberg said the museum was "a reminder to us and all future generations that freedom carries heavy responsibilities".[314] He continued to lead the annual 9/11 ceremony after leaving office.[307] In 2010 he replanted the Callery Pear tree that had been originally planted in the World Trade Center complex and was discovered in the rubble and saved after the attacks.[315] In September 2021, marking the 20th anniversary of the attacks, Bloomberg and the museum launched The Never Forget Fund, focused on educational programming about 9/11.[316][317]

Other philanthropy

[edit]

Through Bloomberg Philanthropies, Bloomberg supported the Fresh Air Fund's creation of 'Open Spaces in the City' in summer 2020 to provide socially-distant areas for kids to play during the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as jobs for local teens.[318][319] He donated $3 million to the construction of a new public library in his hometown of Medford[320] and $75 million for The Shed, a new arts and cultural center in Hudson Yards, Manhattan.[321][322][323]

In September 2023, the Perelman Performing Arts Center opened with $130 million of support from Bloomberg, who serves as its chair.[324] The $500 million art center is the final major piece of the redevelopment of the site where the World Trade Center once stood.[325]

Following the Hamas attack on Israel in October 2023, Bloomberg committed to matching donations to the Israeli Red Cross, known as Magen David Adom. By October 19, 2023, Bloomberg had matched $25 million in donations to the ambulance and Medivac services.[326]

Bloomberg also endowed his hometown synagogue, Temple Shalom, which was renamed for his parents as the William and Charlotte Bloomberg Jewish Community Center of Medford.[327]

Bloomberg hosted the Global Business Forum in 2017, during the annual meeting of the United Nations General Assembly; the gathering featured international CEOs, heads of state, and other prominent speakers.[328][329][330]

In 2009, Bloomberg met with fellow billionaires, including Warren Buffett, Bill Gates, Ted Turner and Oprah Winfrey, to address issues ranging from the environment, health care and concerns over population growth. Although no formal organization was established, the effort was understood to be designed to help bring various philanthropic projects of the mega-donors into a more unified effort.[331][332]

Controversies

[edit]

Sexist remarks

[edit]

Throughout his business career, Bloomberg has made numerous statements which have been considered by some to be insulting, derogatory, sexist or misogynistic. When working on Wall Street in the 1960s and 1970s, Bloomberg claimed in his 1997 autobiography, he had "a girlfriend in every city".[333][334] On various occasions, Bloomberg allegedly commented "I'd do her", regarding certain women, some of whom were coworkers or employees. Bloomberg later said that by "do", he meant that he would have a personal relationship with the woman.[335]

Bloomberg's company Bloomberg L.P. in the 1980s and 1990s has been compared to a fraternity, with employees bragging in the company's office about their sexual exploits.[336][337] The company was sued four times by female employees for sexual harassment, including one incident in which a victim claimed to have been raped.[338][335] To celebrate Bloomberg's 48th birthday, colleagues published a pamphlet entitled The Portable Bloomberg: The Wit and Wisdom of Michael Bloomberg. Among various sayings that were attributed to him, several have subsequently been criticized as sexist or misogynistic.[339][340][336] Further, the Washington Post acquired a booklet of Bloomberg quotes, which included: "If women wanted to be appreciated for their brains, they'd go to the library instead of to Bloomingdale's."[341] Bloomberg's staff told the New York Times that he now regrets having made "disrespectful" remarks concerning women.[335]

Campaign finance controversies

[edit]

After the release of Independence Party campaign filings in January 2010, it was reported that Bloomberg had made two $600,000 contributions from his personal account to the Independence Party on October 30 and November 2, 2009.[342] The Independence Party then paid $750,000 of that money to Republican Party political operative John Haggerty Jr.[343] This prompted an investigation beginning in February 2010 by the office of New York County District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. into possible improprieties.[344] The Independence Party later questioned how Haggerty spent the money, which was to go to poll-watchers.[345] Former New York State Senator Martin Connor contended that because the Bloomberg donations were made to an Independence Party housekeeping account rather than to an account meant for current campaigns, this was a violation of campaign finance laws.[346] Haggerty also spent money from a separate $200,000 donation from Bloomberg on office space.[347]

In March 2020, during Bloomberg’s presidential bid, he was sued by multiple former campaign staffers alleging fraud, and claiming that as many as 2,000 campaign staffers who were promised to be paid through the election were fired instead.[348][349][350]

Electoral history

[edit]

Personal life

[edit]

Family and relationships

[edit]

In 1975, Bloomberg married Susan Elizabeth Barbara Brown, a British national from Yorkshire, United Kingdom.[351] They have two daughters: Emma Beth (born c. 1979), and Georgina Leigh (born 1983), who were featured on Born Rich, a 2003 documentary film about the children of the extremely wealthy. Bloomberg divorced Brown in 1993, but he has said she remains his "best friend".[300] Since 2000, Bloomberg has lived with former New York state banking superintendent Diana Taylor.[352][353][354][355] Emma Bloomberg was married to Chris Frissora, son of Mark Frissora,[356] and they had a daughter with a hybrid surname, Frissberg.[357]

Bloomberg's younger sister, Marjorie Tiven, has been commissioner of the New York City Commission for the United Nations, Consular Corps, and Protocol, since February 2002.[358]

Relations with the Sackler family

[edit]

During the opioid epidemic in the United States, Mortimer Sackler — son of a co-founder of the company, Purdue Pharma, and a member of its board, met with Bloomberg to "seek his help and guidance on the current issues we are facing". Purdue's head of communications, Josephine Martin, added "Any positive news or ability to get our side out is through Bloomberg. We have given them exclusives and they have treated us very well." Bloomberg also advised Mortimer Sackler to consult Stu Loeser to help manage communications.[359][360]

Religion

[edit]

Although he attended Hebrew school, had a bar mitzvah, and his family kept a kosher kitchen, Bloomberg today lives a mostly secular religious life, attending synagogue mainly during the High Holidays and a Passover Seder with his sister, Marjorie Tiven.[361] Neither of his daughters had bat mitzvahs, nor does either daughter follow a religiously Jewish lifestyle, such as abiding kosher dietary restrictions or keeping the Jewish sabbath.[361]

Public image and lifestyle

[edit]

During his term as mayor, he lived at his own home on the Upper East Side of Manhattan instead of Gracie Mansion, the official mayoral residence.[362] In 2013, he owned 13 properties in various countries around the world, including a $20 million Georgian mansion in Southampton, New York.[363][364] In 2015, he acquired 4 Cheyne Walk, a historical property in Cheyne Walk, Chelsea, London, which once belonged to writer George Eliot.[365] Bloomberg and his daughters own houses in Bermuda and stay there frequently.[366][367]

Bloomberg stated that during his mayoralty, he rode the New York City Subway on a daily basis, particularly in the commute from his 79th Street home to his office at City Hall. An August 2007 story in The New York Times stated that he was often seen chauffeured by two New York Police Department-owned SUVs to an express train station to avoid having to change from the local to the express trains on the IRT Lexington Avenue Line.[368] He supported the construction of the 7 Subway Extension and the Second Avenue Subway; in December 2013, Bloomberg took a ceremonial ride on a train to the new 34th Street station to celebrate a part of his legacy as mayor.[369][370]

During his tenure as mayor, Bloomberg made cameos playing himself in the films The Adjustment Bureau and New Year's Eve, as well as in episodes of 30 Rock, Curb Your Enthusiasm, The Good Wife, and two episodes of Law & Order.[371]

Bloomberg is a private pilot.[372] He owns six airplanes: three Dassault Falcon 900s, a Beechcraft B300, a Pilatus PC-24, and a Cessna 182 Skylane. Bloomberg also owns two helicopters: an AW109 and an Airbus helicopter[373] and as of 2012 was near the top of the waiting list for an AW609 tiltrotor aircraft.[374] In his youth, he was a licensed amateur radio operator, was proficient in Morse code, and built ham radios.[375]

Bloomberg's fortune is managed by Willett Advisors, an investment firm that serves as his family office.[376]

Awards and honors

[edit]

Bloomberg has received honorary degrees from Tufts University (2007),[377] Bard College (2007),[378] Rockefeller University (2007),[379] the University of Pennsylvania (2008),[380] Fordham University (2009),[381][382] Williams College (2014),[383][384] Harvard University (2014),[385] the University of Michigan (2016),[386] Villanova University (2017) [387] and Washington University in St. Louis (2019).[388]

Bloomberg was the speaker for Princeton University's 2011 baccalaureate service.[389]

On May 27, 2010, Bloomberg delivered the commencement speech at his alma mater, Johns Hopkins University.[390] In addition, he was invited to and delivered guest remarks for the Johns Hopkins Class of 2020. Other notable guest speakers during the virtual ceremony included Reddit co-founder and Commencement speaker Alexis Ohanian; Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and a leading member of the White House Coronavirus Task Force; and senior class president Pavan Patel[391] In 2022, Bloomberg was awarded the Asia Game Changer Award.[392]

Bloomberg has received the Yale School of Management's Award for Distinguished Leadership in Global Capital Markets (2003);[393] Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement presented by Ehud Barak (2004);[394][395] Barnard College's Barnard Medal of Distinction (2008);[396] the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Leadership for Healthy Communities' Healthy Communities Leadership Award (2009);[397] and the Jefferson Awards Foundation's U.S. Senator John Heinz Award for Greatest Public Service by an Elected or Appointed Official (2010).[398] He was the inaugural laureate of the annual Genesis Prize for Jewish values in 2013,[399] and donated the $1 million prize money to a global competition, the Genesis Generation Challenge, to identify young adults' big ideas to better the world.[400]

Bloomberg was named the 39th most influential person in the world in the 2007 and 2008 Time 100.[401] In 2009, Bloomberg was awarded the Lasker Award.[402] In 2010, Vanity Fair ranked him #7 in its "Vanity Fair 100" list of influential figures.[403]

Bloomberg received a Lifetime Achievement award from the Webby Awards in 2012.[404] In 2013, the Tony Awards gave Bloomberg the Excellence in Theatre Award.[405]

In 2014, Queen Elizabeth II appointed Bloomberg an Honorary Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire for his "prodigious entrepreneurial and philanthropic endeavors, and the many ways in which they have benefited the United Kingdom and the U.K.-U.S. special relationship."[406] The League of Conservation Voters awarded Bloomberg the Lifetime Achievement Award in 2018.[407][408] He was the recipient of the Heyman Service to America Medal in 2019.[409][410]

In 2024, President Joe Biden awarded Bloomberg the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the Nation's highest civilian honor.[7][8]

In January 2025 Bloomberg was awarded the Department of the Navy Distinguished Public Service Award.[411]

In March 2025, Time Magazine awarded Bloomberg the Earth Award[412] for his ongoing environmental work including the closure of 300 coal-fired power plants across America, a 20% reduction in N.Y.'s emissions, and donating over $1 billion to climate causes.[413]

Books and other works

[edit]

Bloomberg, with Matthew Winkler, wrote an autobiography, Bloomberg by Bloomberg, published in 1997 by Wiley.[414] A second edition was released in 2019, ahead of Bloomberg's presidential run.[415][416] Bloomberg and former Sierra Club Executive Director Carl Pope co-authored Climate of Hope: How Cities, Businesses, and Citizens Can Save the Planet (2017), published by St. Martin's Press; the book appeared on the New York Times hardcover nonfiction best-seller list.[417][418] Bloomberg has written a number of op-eds in The New York Times about various issues, including an op-ed supporting state and local efforts to fight climate change (2017),[419] an op-ed about his donation of $1.8 billion in financial aid for college students and support for need-blind admission policies (2018);[420] an op-ed supporting a ban on flavored e-cigarettes (2019);[421] and an op-ed supporting policies to reduce economic inequality (2020).[422]

See also

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References

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Further reading

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Michael Rubens Bloomberg (born February 14, 1942) is an American businessman, politician, and philanthropist who founded in 1981, a financial information and media company that revolutionized trading with the . He served as the 108th for three consecutive terms from 2002 to 2013, during which he focused on economic recovery post-9/11, crime reduction, and initiatives.
Bloomberg's mayoral administration implemented data-driven policies, including aggressive policing strategies like expanded stop-and-frisk practices that correlated with significant drops in rates, though these were later criticized for racial disparities in enforcement and led to federal court rulings deeming them unconstitutional. Other notable efforts included a ban on large sugary drinks to combat , which faced legal challenges but highlighted his emphasis on behavioral interventions for health outcomes. His leadership emphasized fiscal discipline and infrastructure improvements, contributing to New York City's rebound as a global financial hub. As of October 2025, Bloomberg's stands at approximately $109.4 billion, primarily from his ownership stake in Bloomberg L.P., making him one of the world's richest individuals. Through , he has given $21.1 billion to initiatives in , environmental , , and , including anti-smoking campaigns and efforts that have influenced policy worldwide. Bloomberg briefly entered the 2020 Democratic presidential primaries, spending over $1 billion of his own funds before withdrawing and endorsing , reflecting his pragmatic approach to politics often independent of strict partisan lines.

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Family Background

Michael Bloomberg was born Michael Rubens Bloomberg on February 14, 1942, at St. Elizabeth's Hospital in Boston's Brighton neighborhood, , to William Henry Bloomberg (1906–1963), a bookkeeper, and Charlotte Rubens Bloomberg (1909–2011), an office manager. The family was Jewish, with Bloomberg as the grandson of Russian and Polish immigrants, and he had one younger sister, Marjorie Tiven. When Bloomberg was three years old, the family relocated to a middle-class home in the blue-collar suburb of , where he spent his formative years. His father worked six or seven days a week as a bookkeeper for a small company in nearby , a job that involved long hours and modest pay. His mother, who held a in accounting from —a rarity for women of her generation—had worked as a secretary for the dairy's parent company in New York prior to her 1934 marriage, after which she stayed home to raise the children, and emphasized values of hard work, intellectual curiosity, and ambition to them. Bloomberg has described accompanying his father to the dairy office on weekends, observing the routines of small-business operations, which exposed him early to practical financial record-keeping and . In 1954, at age 12, he earned the rank of , with his parents and sister present at the ceremony, reflecting the family's support for his extracurricular achievements.

Academic and Early Professional Experience

Bloomberg earned a degree in from in 1964. While a there, he constructed the school's first FM radio station. To finance his education, he worked as a parking lot attendant and relied on government loans. Following undergraduate studies, Bloomberg enrolled at , from which he received an MBA in 1966. In 1966, Bloomberg joined , a investment bank, in an entry-level position with an annual salary of $9,000. Over the next 15 years, he advanced to become a , overseeing equity trading, systems development, and the firm's systems. In 1981, following ' acquisition by Phibro Corporation, Bloomberg was terminated from the firm.

Business Career

Founding and Development of Bloomberg L.P.

Michael Bloomberg founded in 1981 following his departure from , where he had worked for 15 years rising to partner before being let go amid the firm's acquisition by Corporation. He utilized a $10 million to provide the initial capital for the venture, initially named Innovative Market Systems, aimed at delivering specialized financial data and analytics to bond traders who lacked efficient access to real-time pricing and market information. The company was co-founded with partners including , Duncan MacMillan, and Charles Zegar, and received early backing through a 12% ownership stake from Merrill Lynch, which facilitated initial terminal deployments to its clients. Bloomberg L.P. renamed itself in 1986 and expanded its terminal network by targeting securities firms, trading desks, and institutional investors, emphasizing proprietary data integration and user-friendly interfaces that integrated pricing models with execution capabilities. By late 1993, the firm had deployed over 31,000 Bloomberg Terminals globally, driving revenue growth through subscription-based access to fixed-income analytics, equity research, and economic indicators. Subsequent developments included launching Bloomberg Tradebook in the early 1990s for electronic trading and entering media with in 1990 and in 1994, which cross-promoted terminal subscriptions and broadened the company's ecosystem. These innovations solidified 's position as a dominant provider in , with Michael Bloomberg retaining majority ownership exceeding 80% as the company scaled without public listing.

Innovations in Financial Data and Technology

After his departure from Salomon Brothers in 1981, Michael Bloomberg used a $10 million severance package to found Innovative Market Systems (IMS), the precursor to Bloomberg L.P., aimed at developing computerized financial data tools focused initially on fixed-income securities. The company's flagship innovation, the Bloomberg Terminal, launched in 1982 as a dedicated computer system delivering real-time market data, pricing analytics, and fair value models for bonds, which addressed the era's limitations in accessible and integrated financial information for traders. The Terminal's early adoption came via Merrill Lynch, which purchased 20 units shortly after , marking the first major client and validating its utility in enhancing trading efficiency through that combined , calculation engines, and user interfaces tailored for professional use. By integrating features like advanced charting, ratio analysis, and debt-equity modeling, the system enabled users to perform rapid security evaluations and portfolio monitoring, distinguishing it from fragmented sources prevalent at the time. Over the next decade, enhancements included a specialized keyboard with and voice-chat capabilities in 1990, followed by color displays in 1991, which improved usability and visualization on trading floors. To bolster the Terminal's data ecosystem, Bloomberg launched in 1990, creating an in-house wire service that provided context-rich reporting directly tied to market movements, thereby reducing reliance on external feeds and ensuring timely, verifiable insights for subscribers. This of news, analytics, and communication tools—such as secure messaging—fostered a networked environment where professionals could execute trades, share intelligence, and model scenarios in real time, fundamentally reshaping financial workflows and contributing to the platform's expansion to over 10,000 subscribers by 1991. The Terminal's enduring impact stems from its continuous evolution, incorporating , environmental-social-governance metrics, and integrations for , while maintaining a subscription model that priced access at around $25,000 annually per user as of recent years, underscoring its perceived indispensability despite alternatives. By prioritizing proprietary data depth over commoditized feeds, Bloomberg's innovations established a in , influencing industry standards for information delivery and decision support.

Wealth Accumulation and Business Empire

Following his departure from Salomon Brothers in 1981, where he received a $10 million severance payment after the firm's acquisition by Phibro Corporation, Michael Bloomberg founded Innovative Market Systems (later renamed Bloomberg L.P.) using his own capital as seed funding. The company developed the Bloomberg Professional Service, commonly known as the Bloomberg Terminal, a proprietary computer system delivering real-time financial market data, analytics, news, and trading tools tailored for investment professionals. This innovation addressed gaps in accessible, integrated financial information, enabling users to analyze securities, monitor markets, and execute trades efficiently from a single interface. Initial growth accelerated through a with Merrill Lynch, which invested $30 million for a 30% stake and committed to installing 20 terminals, validating the product's utility in a competitive landscape dominated by fragmented data providers. By focusing on subscription-based access—priced at around $2,000 monthly per terminal initially, escalating to approximately $25,000 annually per user—the model created recurring revenue streams resistant to market volatility. expanded its terminal subscriber base to over 325,000 by the early , with the service accounting for about 85% of the company's revenue, which exceeded $12 billion annually as of recent estimates. The firm's business empire diversified beyond core data services into media and software, launching in 1990 to supply proprietary content feeding the terminals, alongside , Radio, and digital platforms, though these segments contribute a smaller revenue share. Bloomberg retained majority control, owning roughly 88% of the privately held entity, which has propelled his personal fortune through undistributed profits rather than public sales. As of October 2025, estimates his at $109 billion, primarily derived from this stake, positioning him among the world's wealthiest individuals via sustained enterprise value growth rather than leveraged acquisitions or speculative ventures. This accumulation reflects the terminal's monopoly-like entrenchment in finance, where switching costs and network effects deter competitors, ensuring long-term profitability.

Entry into Politics

Motivations and Initial Campaigns

After building into a leading financial and media company, Michael Bloomberg sought to apply his experience in and efficient to , viewing New York City's government as inefficient and in need of business-like reforms amid economic challenges from the dot-com bust. A political outsider with no prior elective experience, he initially considered running as a Democrat but found the 2001 primary field crowded with established figures like and Mark Green, limiting opportunities for a newcomer. In April 2001, Bloomberg registered as a Republican to pursue that party's nomination, calculating it offered a clearer path in a city where incumbent Mayor Rudy Giuliani's popularity provided a tailwind for his successor despite the Democratic voter majority. Bloomberg formally announced his candidacy on June 5, 2001, through a series of television advertisements emphasizing his independence from special interests and commitment to fiscal discipline and public safety continuity. The terrorist attacks, occurring three months later, intensified the campaign's focus on crisis leadership and economic recovery, positioning Bloomberg as a steady, non-ideological alternative capable of managing the city's $3 billion budget shortfall and rebuilding efforts; polls showed his support surging post-attacks, aided by Giuliani's endorsement. He secured the Republican nomination with minimal opposition and ran a self-funded campaign, investing about $69 million—equivalent to roughly $92 per vote in the general election—to dominate airwaves and outreach in a race against Democrat Mark Green. This strategy highlighted his outsider status and willingness to bypass traditional fundraising, though critics attributed his visibility more to spending than policy depth.

2001 Mayoral Election

In the 2001 New York City mayoral election, incumbent Republican Mayor was barred from seeking a third consecutive term due to term limits enacted in 1993. The race occurred amid the aftermath of the , 2001, terrorist attacks, which boosted Giuliani's approval ratings to over 90% and shifted voter priorities toward leadership continuity and . Michael Bloomberg, a self-made and founder of the financial data firm , announced his candidacy in February 2001 as a Republican, despite having been a registered Democrat for most of his life; he switched parties to enter the race, citing the Democratic primary's overcrowding with experienced politicians as limiting his chances otherwise. Bloomberg secured the Republican nomination by defeating former Bronx Congressman in the primary on September 25, 2001, with Badillo conceding shortly after polls closed. In the Democratic primary held earlier on , 2001—the same day as the attacks—Public Advocate Mark Green finished first but short of a majority, leading to a runoff against Borough President on October 11, which Green won narrowly amid racial tensions exacerbated by Ferrer's comments on police shootings of minorities. Bloomberg's campaign emphasized his for fiscal , opposition to tax hikes, through accountability metrics, and commitment to extending Giuliani-era policing strategies, while self-funding the effort to an unprecedented degree. On November 6, 2001, Bloomberg defeated in a close contest, receiving endorsement from Giuliani in the campaign's final days, which analysts attributed to swaying undecided voters seeking stability post-9/11. Bloomberg invested approximately $69 million of his personal wealth—equivalent to about $92.60 per vote—shattering prior records for mayoral spending and enabling saturation advertising that highlighted his executive experience over Green's public service tenure. The victory marked a rare Republican win in heavily Democratic (where registered Democrats outnumbered Republicans roughly 5-to-1), propelled by the attacks' timing, which postponed some campaigning and reframed the electorate's focus on competent governance amid economic uncertainty and rebuilding needs. Bloomberg was inaugurated as the 108th mayor on January 1, 2002.

Mayoralty of New York City

Economic and Fiscal Policies

Upon assuming office in January 2002, Bloomberg inherited a fiscal crisis exacerbated by the September 11, 2001 attacks, which caused an estimated $80-95 billion in economic losses for , including sharp declines in , , and real estate sectors. To address a projected $6 billion budget deficit, he proposed and implemented an 18.5% increase in the rate in June 2002, raising the average homeowner's bill from approximately $1,853 to $2,024 annually, though this fell short of his initial 25% proposal amid opposition. Subsequent tax hikes, including on sales and income, contributed to roughly $3 billion in additional annual revenue by 2005, with two-thirds derived from property taxes, enabling the city to avoid deeper service cuts or reliance on state aid. Bloomberg's administration emphasized budget discipline, achieving balanced budgets each fiscal year from 2003 to 2013 through a combination of revenue growth, expenditure controls, and efficiency measures. During the 2008-2009 , which widened gaps to over $4 billion, he enacted seven rounds of "Programs to Eliminate the Gap" (PEGs), targeting $2-3 billion in annual savings via agency reductions, overtime curbs, and deferred hires, while preserving core services like police and fire. Economic policies promoted growth in , , and , with the 2007 Five Borough Economic Opportunity Plan allocating $7.6 billion over five years to and incentives for small businesses, including reductions in the Unincorporated Business Tax affecting 17,000 entities. These efforts coincided with citywide private-sector job gains of about 300,000 from 2002 to 2013, though peaked at 10.2% in 2010 before declining. On pensions and debt, Bloomberg prioritized reforms to curb escalating costs, which rose from $2.5 billion in 2002 to over $8 billion by due to generous benefits and investment returns lagging assumptions. He advocated state-level changes to allow direct negotiations with unions on future hires' benefits, endorsed Cuomo's Tier VI overhaul raising employee contributions and retirement ages, and proposed $1 billion in savings by fiscal 2019 through hybrid plans and cost-of-living adjustments. Despite these, grew to $90 billion by 2013, partly from capital borrowing for projects, but fiscal reserves reached $5.3 billion by his final year, providing a buffer against downturns. Critics, including , argued pension projections underestimated future burdens, potentially adding $20 billion over a decade without deeper reforms. Overall, Bloomberg's approach stabilized finances post-crises but relied on tax elevations that disproportionately affected middle-class homeowners while fostering Wall Street-led recovery.

Public Safety and Stop-and-Frisk Implementation

During Michael Bloomberg's mayoral tenure from 2002 to 2013, experienced continued declines in , with overall rates dropping more than 32 percent compared to 2001 levels, making it the safest large U.S. city by 2013. Homicide numbers fell from 649 in 2001 to a record low of 335 in 2013, reflecting sustained emphasis on proactive policing strategies inherited and expanded from the prior administration, including data analytics and targeted enforcement against low-level offenses to deter serious . These efforts correlated with reduced , as police recovered thousands of illegal firearms through street-level interventions, which Bloomberg argued were essential for preventing murders in high-risk areas. Central to this approach was the expansion of the New York Police Department's stop-and-frisk policy, authorized under (1968) and intensified to address illegal gun possession amid persistent urban violence. Annual stops rose from 97,296 in 2002 to a peak of 685,724 in 2011, with over 4.8 million total stops during Bloomberg's terms, primarily in precincts with elevated crime rates. Bloomberg defended the practice as a necessary deterrent, stating in a 2015 speech that concentrating police in minority neighborhoods—where most shootings occurred among young and males—enabled frisking for weapons, thereby reducing murders by removing illegal guns from circulation. Empirical analyses indicate stop-and-frisk contributed modestly to crime suppression at the micro-level, with studies showing localized deterrent effects on offenses like and assault through increased perceived risk of detection, though broader causal attribution remains debated given pre-existing downward trends. The policy drew criticism for racial disparities, as approximately 85 percent of those stopped were or , far exceeding their proportion of the population or rates for weapons offenses, prompting claims of unconstitutional profiling. Bloomberg countered that stops were driven by , not race, targeting areas and demographics statistically linked to to protect residents in those communities from . In Floyd v. City of New York (2013), a federal district court ruled the NYPD's practices violated the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments through a pattern of indirect and failure to document adequately, ordering reforms including body cameras and a court monitor. Stops subsequently declined sharply to 191,851 by 2013 without an immediate surge, though proponents attribute ongoing reductions partly to residual effects of prior enforcement. Critics from advocacy groups like the NYCLU, which emphasize over policing efficacy, highlight low yields (around 10 percent) and innocent outcomes (over 80 percent), but such sources often prioritize equity narratives amid evidence of targeted deterrence in violent hotspots.

Education Reforms and School Control

Upon assuming office in 2001, Bloomberg advocated for consolidating control over New York City's public schools, which had been decentralized and managed by an independent plagued by inefficiency and finger-pointing between city hall and the board. In June 2002, state legislation granted him near-total authority, abolishing the and establishing the mayor-appointed Panel for Educational Policy, with Bloomberg selecting the schools chancellor and a majority of panel members. This shift ended decades of fragmented , enabling direct accountability to voters via the mayor but drawing criticism for reducing community input and checks on executive power. Bloomberg appointed former antitrust lawyer as chancellor in 2002, who implemented data-driven reforms emphasizing accountability, , and performance metrics. Key initiatives included grading schools A-F based on test scores and graduation rates, closing dozens of low-performing schools—over 100 by 2013—and replacing them with smaller, specialized high schools and more than 100 charter schools to foster competition. The administration increased the education budget by billions, standardized admissions for selective schools via uniform testing, and introduced teacher evaluations tied partly to student test performance, aiming to identify and reward effective educators while weeding out underperformers. These changes prioritized empirical metrics over tenure protections, clashing with the , which opposed closures and evaluations as overly punitive and disruptive to veteran staff. Outcomes showed gains in headline metrics but persistent debates over sustainability and validity. State test scores rose steadily, with high school graduation rates climbing from 54% in 2004 to nearly 75% by 2013, alongside increased enrollment. (NAEP) results indicated progress, such as 11-point gains in fourth-grade reading and math scale scores, though proficiency rates remained low at around 24% in reading by 2011. Critics, including historians, argued that state score —potentially from lowered standards, recovery programs diluting rigor, and isolated incidents—overstated achievements, while charters outperformed traditional schools but served smaller, often higher-achieving subsets of students. Proponents credited mayoral control with breaking bureaucratic inertia, though state reviews post-Bloomberg noted uneven implementation and called for balanced oversight. In 2009, Bloomberg secured a six-year extension of mayoral control amid opposition, framing it as essential for continuity; it lapsed briefly in before renewal under his successor. Klein departed in 2011, succeeded by Walcott, but core reforms endured, influencing national debates on urban despite ideological divides—reform advocates hailed accountability's causal role in progress, while detractors highlighted equity costs from closures disproportionately affecting minority neighborhoods.

Urban Development and Infrastructure Projects

During his mayoralty from 2002 to 2013, Michael Bloomberg oversaw extensive rezoning efforts that covered nearly 40 percent of New York City's landmass, facilitating a construction boom that added millions of square feet of commercial, residential, and mixed-use development. This included the 2005 rezoning of the Hudson Yards area on Manhattan's West Side, which spurred over 7.5 million square feet of development by 2013, encompassing 15 hotel rooms totaling more than 5,000 units, office towers, and residential buildings, alongside the extension of the No. 7 subway line to serve the new district. A cornerstone of Bloomberg's infrastructure agenda was PlaNYC 2030, launched on April 22, 2007, as a comprehensive plan anticipating population growth to 9 million by 2030 and targeting a 30 percent reduction in from 2005 levels through goals in , , transportation efficiency, , air quality, and climate adaptation. By the progress update, the initiative had achieved measurable reductions, including 15.6 million metric tons of annual CO2-equivalent emissions avoided through anti-sprawl measures, 10.6 million tons via cleaner power generation, 16.4 million tons from building efficiency upgrades, and 6.1 million tons from sustainable transportation improvements. Post-9/11 reconstruction of emphasized and transportation integration, with Bloomberg's administration advancing plans for the , including office towers, a , and transit enhancements in coordination with state and federal entities. Complementary projects included the preservation and of the , an elevated rail structure, which the Bloomberg administration endorsed in 2002; construction began in 2006, with the first section opening as a public park in 2009 and subsequent phases completed during his tenure, catalyzing $2 billion in adjacent investments. Transportation infrastructure initiatives under Bloomberg expanded pedestrian-friendly spaces and cycling networks, with the installing nearly 400 miles of bike lanes by 2013, including protected segments buffered by parked cars, and piloting pedestrian plazas in 2008—such as the conversion of parts of and —which demonstrated economic viability through increased property values and retail activity. These efforts aligned with broader waterfront revitalization, adding over 850 acres of new parkland, much along the East and Hudson Rivers, to enhance resilience and public access.

Health and Regulatory Initiatives

Bloomberg implemented a series of regulations during his mayoral tenure, emphasizing , nutritional reform, and chronic disease prevention through the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. These measures, often enacted via the unelected Board of Health, included restrictions on , artificial trans fats, and sugary beverages, alongside mandates for nutritional transparency. Proponents credited them with contributing to improved metrics, such as a rise in citywide from 77.8 years in 2001 to 81.1 years in 2013, while critics argued they represented excessive government intervention in personal choices with limited causal impact on behaviors like overeating. Tobacco control formed a of these efforts. In March 2003, Bloomberg signed a banning in all indoor workplaces, bars, and restaurants, effective immediately and enforced with fines up to $2,000 for violations; this built on a partial 1988 ban and was justified by evidence linking secondhand smoke to and heart disease. The policy spurred a 36% drop in adult smoking prevalence, from 21.5% in 2002 to 13.8% in 2013, eliminating about 300,000 smokers and averting an estimated 7,000 premature deaths annually based on epidemiological models. Subsequent expansions in 2011 prohibited in parks, beaches, and pedestrian plazas, further reducing exposure, though overall U.S. smoking declines during the period suggest multifaceted causation including price hikes and awareness campaigns. Nutritional regulations targeted and cardiovascular risks. In December 2006, the Board of Health restricted artificial s—partially hydrogenated oils causally associated with elevated LDL cholesterol and a 23% increased coronary heart disease risk per 2% energy intake from them—in all city restaurants and mobile vendors, with compliance required by July 2008 after a phase-in period; was the first major U.S. jurisdiction to enact such a ban. Post-implementation data showed levels in blood samples fell by 50% or more, with no disproportionate economic burden on eateries as alternatives like proved viable, though long-term cardiovascular outcomes remain confounded by concurrent national trends. In 2008, chain restaurants with 15 or more locations were mandated to display calorie counts on menus and menu boards, a measure that influenced the 2010 federal Affordable Care Act's similar requirements but yielded inconclusive evidence of reduced consumption, as surveys indicated only marginal awareness and behavioral shifts. Efforts to curb sugar intake proved more contentious. In September 2012, Bloomberg announced a Board of Health rule prohibiting sales of sugary drinks over 16 fluid ounces in food service establishments, exempting , 100% , and diet sodas, with the aim of addressing rates hovering around 20% in adults; the portion cap was set based on evidence that larger sizes correlate with higher intake via unit bias and refill norms. A state court struck down the ban in March 2013 as exceeding the board's authority, before it could take effect on March 12, halting potential empirical testing; similar proposals elsewhere failed, and rates in showed no significant decline attributable to other Bloomberg policies, stabilizing rather than reversing amid broader socioeconomic factors. Complementary initiatives included a voluntary sodium reduction program with partners, targeting a 20% cut by 2015, and expanded access to subsidized , which reduced the uninsured population by 40% to cover an additional 700,000 residents by 2013 through income-based eligibility expansions.

Term Limit Extension and 2009 Re-election

In June 2008, Michael Bloomberg began advocating for an extension of the city's term limits, which had been established by a 1993 voter limiting elected officials, including the , to two consecutive four-year terms. Bloomberg cited the ongoing global financial crisis as necessitating experienced leadership beyond the impending 2009 election, arguing that abrupt turnover could hinder effective governance during economic turmoil. Critics, including good-government groups and opponents, contended that the push represented a self-interested circumvention of voter will, as the term limits had been ratified twice by —in 1993 and reaffirmed in 1996—without subsequent public vote on extension. On October 23, 2008, the voted 29-22 to amend the city charter, extending term limits to three consecutive terms for incumbents whose second term would end in , while preserving the two-term limit for future officeholders starting after that cycle. The measure passed despite opposition from 22 council members and public protests, with supporters including Council Speaker emphasizing continuity amid recessionary pressures; detractors highlighted Bloomberg's substantial influence over council dynamics, including campaign contributions from his political operation that had flowed to many yes-voting members. Bloomberg signed the bill into law shortly thereafter, enabling his candidacy for a third term while also benefiting other incumbents seeking re-election or higher office. The legislative change drew widespread condemnation as undemocratic, with outlets like editorializing that it undermined the charter reform process designed to prevent entrenched power. Bloomberg formally announced his re-election bid on October 2, 2008, running on the Republican and Party lines after forgoing the endorsement. His 2009 campaign faced Democrat William C. Thompson Jr., the city , who campaigned heavily on the term-limits reversal as evidence of Bloomberg's arrogance and detachment, framing it as a billionaire's override of democratic checks. Bloomberg's team spent approximately $108 million—more than five times Thompson's total and a record for a U.S. municipal race—on advertising and get-out-the-vote efforts, emphasizing his record on crime reduction, economic management, and post-9/11 recovery. Polling showed Bloomberg leading comfortably until late October, when term-limits backlash and perceptions of overreach narrowed the gap. On November 3, 2009, Bloomberg secured a third term with 51 percent of the vote to Thompson's 46 percent, a margin of roughly 150,000 votes out of over 1 million cast, in a race certified by the Board of Elections. The unexpectedly close outcome—contrasting Bloomberg's 2005 —reflected voter discontent with the term-limits extension, as exit polls indicated it alienated independents and moderates despite his advantages in incumbency and . In response to ongoing criticism, voters approved a 2010 ballot measure reverting term limits to two terms, effective for elections after Bloomberg's tenure ended in 2013, underscoring retrospective rejection of the 2008 change.

Post-Mayoral Political Involvement

Independent and Republican Phases

Following his departure from the New York City mayoralty on January 1, 2013, Michael Bloomberg retained his independent (unaffiliated) status, a position he had adopted on , 2007, when he formally severed ties with the Republican Party amid frustrations with its ideological direction under President . This phase marked a continuation of his pragmatic, non-partisan approach to politics, prioritizing policy outcomes over party loyalty, as evidenced by his selective support for candidates across the aisle who aligned with priorities like and fiscal restraint. In April , Bloomberg launched Independence USA, a super PAC aimed at bolstering federal candidates committed to stricter gun laws, , and improvements, irrespective of party. The organization operated with bipartisan flexibility, funding efforts such as $5 million against vulnerable Democratic senators perceived as soft on guns during the midterms, while also backing Republicans like Sen. (R-PA) who supported background checks. By the cycle, Independence USA had expended over $25 million on congressional races, underscoring Bloomberg's willingness to invest heavily in cross-party advocacy during his independent tenure. Bloomberg's independent phase also saw intensified focus on prevention, culminating in the merger of his Mayors Against Illegal Guns with Moms Demand Action to form , backed by his personal $50 million commitment that year alone. This initiative reflected causal priorities rooted in data on reduction, drawing from his mayoral-era experiences, though it increasingly aligned with progressive causes amid rising partisan divides. Despite occasional nods to Republican moderates—such as donations to figures like former Sen. (R-OH) in 2016—Bloomberg's activities evinced a drift from his earlier GOP roots, emphasizing evidence-based interventions over ideological purity. Throughout 2013–2017, Bloomberg abstained from formal endorsements in key local races, including New York City's 2013 mayoral contest, citing dissatisfaction with available successors and a for transition-focused neutrality. His donations, totaling tens of millions via personal and PAC channels, targeted issue-specific outcomes rather than wholesale party support, maintaining the independent ethos that defined his post-Republican evolution. This period highlighted a meta-awareness of institutional biases, with Bloomberg critiquing both parties' extremes while leveraging his wealth for targeted influence, unencumbered by formal affiliation.

2016 and 2018 Election Engagements

In early 2016, Michael Bloomberg explored the possibility of an independent presidential candidacy, instructing advisers to prepare plans amid dissatisfaction with the contenders. He publicly confirmed considering a run as an independent in 2016, viewing an opening due to the perceived weaknesses in the Republican and Democratic fields. However, on March 7, 2016, Bloomberg announced he would not pursue the presidency, citing in a Bloomberg View column that his candidacy would likely split votes and fail to achieve electoral success given the political system's barriers to third-party bids. Bloomberg endorsed for president on July 27, 2016, during a prime-time speech at the in , marking a significant intervention from the former Republican-turned-independent. In the address, he stated his support stemmed from the need to prioritize competent leadership over party loyalty, declaring it "imperative" to elect to counter what he described as Donald Trump's risky and unqualified approach. Bloomberg sharply criticized Trump as a "dangerous " who lacked the experience and temperament for the office, emphasizing his own New York roots to question Trump's business credentials and reliability. This endorsement, from a with a history of crossing party lines, aimed to appeal to moderates and business-oriented voters wary of Trump's populist style. Ahead of the 2018 midterm elections, Bloomberg committed $80 million to support Democratic candidates, focusing on House races in competitive districts to challenge Republican control amid opposition to President Trump's policies. On June 20, 2018, he issued a statement prioritizing country over party, criticizing partisan gridlock and pledging funds through his organization to back candidates emphasizing problem-solving over ideology. This effort targeted 24 races, with Bloomberg's super PAC contributing significantly; post-election analysis showed Democrats backed by his group won 21 of those contests, contributing to the party's House majority flip. On October 10, 2018, Bloomberg re-registered as a Democrat, aligning formally with the party 27 days before voting. Throughout 2018, Bloomberg voiced pointed criticisms of Trump, particularly on policy failures. Following the October 27 Pittsburgh synagogue shooting, he faulted the president for inadequate responses to and inflammatory rhetoric, urging stricter measures over political deflection. In December, he lambasted Trump's withdrawal from the Paris climate accord as shortsighted, contrasting it with evidence-based environmental action and likening inaction to historical policy blunders. These engagements underscored Bloomberg's shift toward Democratic priorities, leveraging his wealth and platform to influence outcomes against Trump's agenda.

2020 Democratic Presidential Campaign

On November 24, 2019, Michael Bloomberg announced his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination via a campaign video, framing his run as a response to the threats posed by President and the rise of within the party. He emphasized his executive experience as mayor and business success, pledging to self-fund the campaign to avoid donor influence and focus on results-oriented governance. Bloomberg's platform highlighted moderate policies, including aggressive action on through a system, universal background checks and a ban on assault weapons for , and pro-growth economic measures like without steep hikes on the . Bloomberg's strategy centered on a late entry, bypassing the , primary, caucuses, and primary to concentrate resources on states on March 3, 2020. He invested heavily in television advertising, spending over $460 million in the first quarter alone, primarily from his personal fortune, to build and appeal to moderate and independent voters. The campaign assembled a large staff and data operation but faced criticism for its top-down approach and Bloomberg's limited retail campaigning. National polling showed a surge to around 19% in late February 2020, placing him second behind in some surveys, driven by perceptions of electability against Trump. The campaign encountered significant controversies, particularly over Bloomberg's past support for New York City's stop-and-frisk policy, which peaked at over 685,000 stops in and correlated with a sharp decline in homicides but was ruled unconstitutional by a federal court in for disproportionately targeting minorities. Bloomberg apologized for the policy's impacts in November 2019 and again on the trail in February 2020, acknowledging he failed to understand its effects on communities of color, though resurfaced audio tapes from revealed defenses framing it in terms of young male minorities committing most murders, prompting backlash. Additionally, allegations of sexist comments toward women during his business career surfaced, including reports of a hostile workplace environment at and his use of non-disclosure agreements; Bloomberg denied forcing NDAs and expressed regret for any discomfort caused, but the issue fueled attacks during his February 19, 2020, debate debut. Bloomberg's first and only debate appearance in drew intense scrutiny, with Senator accusing him of embodying similar authoritarian tendencies to Trump through NDAs and past remarks, a critique that resonated and contributed to a post-debate polling stall. On , despite massive ad buys exceeding $500 million in key states, Bloomberg underperformed, securing no statewide primary victories—though he won the caucus with over 50%—and garnering about 8% of the national vote. On March 4, 2020, he suspended his campaign after 104 days, having spent nearly $1 billion, mostly self-funded, and endorsed as the strongest candidate to defeat Trump. The effort ultimately received about 2.9 million votes, underscoring the challenges of translating financial resources into voter support amid preferences for candidates with stronger grassroots appeal.

Recent Political Donations and Advocacy (2020s)

Following his withdrawal from the 2020 Democratic presidential primaries on March 4, 2020, and subsequent endorsement of , Bloomberg directed significant resources toward Democratic electoral efforts. In the ensuing cycles, he donated over $150 million to support Democratic candidates and causes, including contributions to super PACs and policy advocacy groups aligned with his priorities on and climate policy. In 2024, Bloomberg provided $20 million to Future Forward USA Action, a super PAC backing President Biden's re-election campaign against , announced on June 21. After Biden's withdrawal from the race, Bloomberg shifted support to Kamala Harris, donating an additional $50 million to a pro-Harris super PAC in late , following months of by Democratic operatives; he publicly endorsed Harris on October 31, stating he had voted for her "without hesitation." These contributions totaled at least $69 million to Democratic presidential efforts that year, reflecting Bloomberg's pattern of late-cycle, high-value interventions. Bloomberg's advocacy extended to issue-specific political action, particularly . Through his funding of , the group pledged $45 million in 2024 to support candidates favoring stricter firearm regulations in key congressional races. In April 2025, Everytown announced a $10 million to back Democratic attorneys general in state elections, aimed at sustaining legal challenges to gun rights expansions under the prevailing federal administration. These efforts built on Bloomberg's prior commitments exceeding $270 million to anti-gun violence initiatives, prioritizing electoral influence over direct policy enactment. On climate policy, Bloomberg leveraged his role as UN Special Envoy for to advocate for sustained U.S. commitments amid federal retrenchment. In January 2025, he announced that and allied donors would cover U.S. funding shortfalls to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, ensuring compliance with reporting and financial obligations previously revoked by the incoming administration; this included direct support for emissions tracking and subnational implementation by states and cities. Such moves underscored Bloomberg's emphasis on non-federal actors in advancing decarbonization goals, independent of partisan shifts.

Political Positions and Ideological Evolution

Shifts from Republican to Democrat

Michael Bloomberg, who had switched his voter registration from Democrat to Republican in 2001 to facilitate his successful mayoral campaign against Democratic nominee Mark Green, served two terms as a Republican mayor of New York City from 2002 to 2009. On June 19, 2007, Bloomberg announced his departure from the Republican Party, changing his affiliation to independent (unaffiliated with any party). He cited dissatisfaction with the Republican Party's direction, including its handling of the and a perceived shift away from pragmatic, centrist governance, though the move also fueled speculation about a potential independent presidential bid in 2008. This transition allowed Bloomberg to maintain broad appeal in a city with a Democratic voter majority while distancing himself from national GOP figures and policies he viewed as increasingly ideological. Bloomberg remained an independent for over a decade, endorsing candidates across party lines, such as in 2012, and considering but ultimately forgoing an independent presidential run in 2016 amid concerns over a fragmented electorate. By 2018, however, he grew critical of the Republican Party under President , arguing in a June op-ed that congressional Republicans had failed to govern responsibly after nearly two years in power, particularly on issues like and fiscal discipline. On October 10, 2018, Bloomberg re-registered as a Democrat, stating in a social media post that the switch was necessary to support efforts providing "checks and balances" against the Trump administration and to align with Democratic midterm candidates focused on practical reforms. This reversion to his original party affiliation—where he had been registered for most of his life prior to 2001—positioned him for a potential 2020 Democratic presidential campaign, emphasizing his self-described moderate stance on and social issues against what he saw as extremes in both parties.

Economic and Tax Policies

During his mayoral tenure from 2002 to 2013, Bloomberg prioritized economic recovery following the , 2001 attacks, implementing measures to stabilize city finances and foster job growth in a post-recession environment. New York City's unemployment rate fell from 10.1% in 2003 to 7.7% by 2007, driven by expansions in , , and sectors, with private sector jobs increasing by over 100,000 between 2002 and 2008. He balanced 11 consecutive budgets without deficits, adhering to fiscal rules that limited borrowing for operating expenses, though this involved temporary revenue measures amid federal aid shortfalls. Bloomberg's administration expanded Workforce1 Career Centers to seven locations with extended hours, aiding job placement across boroughs, particularly in and services. On taxation as mayor, Bloomberg approved significant increases to address fiscal gaps, including an 18.5% hike in 2003—the largest in city history—raising average single-family home bills from $1,853 to $2,024, alongside a temporary 0.25% rise to 8.625% starting June 2003. These generated billions in revenue to offset post-9/11 losses estimated at $7-10 billion annually, but critics argued they burdened middle-class residents while preserving services. In 2004, he introduced a $400 annual rebate for owner-occupants, partially mitigating the 2002 increase and benefiting over 400,000 households until its phase-out. By 2005, cumulative tax hikes under his watch totaled up to $3 billion annually, two-thirds from property levies, reflecting a pragmatic approach prioritizing short-term stability over cuts. Bloomberg's economic policies emphasized business attraction, yielding Wall Street gains and developments like Hudson Yards, but coincided with widening inequality: median incomes stagnated for many while top earners captured disproportionate gains, with the Gini coefficient rising from 0.50 in 2000 to 0.54 by 2011. Homelessness surged 35% during his term, from 31,000 in 2002 to over 50,000 by 2013, linked by analysts to housing costs outpacing wage growth despite job additions. Public housing deteriorated, with NYCHA units facing increased vacancies and maintenance backlogs. In his 2020 Democratic presidential bid, Bloomberg advocated reforms targeting high earners and corporations to fund , healthcare, and initiatives, projecting $5 trillion in revenue over a decade. Proposals included a 5% on incomes exceeding $5 million (restoring top marginal rates near 39.6%), raising the corporate rate from 21% to 28%, and reversing 2017 individual cuts for households above $400,000, while opposing a as administratively unfeasible. He framed these as strengthening the without broad-based hikes, drawing from his self-described tempered by support for public investments.

Gun Control and Public Safety Views

Bloomberg has advocated for stringent gun control measures, emphasizing restrictions on illegal firearms and enhanced regulatory frameworks. During his tenure as Mayor of New York City from 2002 to 2013, he initiated lawsuits against gun manufacturers and dealers accused of facilitating illegal trafficking into the city, resulting in settlements that imposed compliance measures on out-of-state sellers. He co-founded Mayors Against Illegal Guns in 2006 to promote local and federal efforts curbing gun violence, which merged in 2014 with Moms Demand Action to form Everytown for Gun Safety, an organization he pledged $50 million to establish as a counterweight to the National Rifle Association. Through Everytown and related entities, Bloomberg has directed substantial funding toward advocacy, including $38 million donated in 2018 alone, supporting campaigns for universal background checks, bans on assault weapons, and prohibitions on high-capacity magazines. In his 2020 presidential campaign platform, he proposed executive actions to close the "gun show loophole," mandate background checks for all sales including private transfers, and raise the minimum age for firearm purchases to 21, while attributing mass shootings to permissive state laws rather than solely federal shortcomings. Bloomberg's public safety approach in prioritized data-driven policing to reduce , achieving a 32% overall decline from 2001 to 2013 and a 50% drop in , from approximately 650 in 2001 to 300 by 2013, outpacing national trends. Central to this was the expansion of stop-and-frisk practices by the NYPD, which escalated dramatically under his administration, with over 4.4 million stops recorded between 2003 and 2013, predominantly targeting and Latino individuals despite low contraband yield rates of about 10%. Bloomberg defended the as essential for removing illegal guns from streets and curbing homicide rates, claiming it prevented thousands of shootings, though federal courts ruled it unconstitutional in 2013 for systemic racial bias. Subsequent reductions in stops post-2013 did not correlate with spikes, as continued to fall, indicating the tactic's marginal role in sustained safety gains amid broader factors like economic improvements and demographic shifts. In 2019, Bloomberg apologized for the policy's disproportionate impacts on minority communities, acknowledging he overlooked its alienating effects while crediting it for interim violence reductions. His administration also lowered police shootings to historic lows and reduced incarceration by nearly 40%, framing these as evidence of effective, targeted enforcement over mass imprisonment.

Climate Change and Environmental Stances

During his tenure as from 2002 to 2013, Bloomberg prioritized environmental sustainability through the launch of PlaNYC in April 2007, a comprehensive strategy to address projected to 9 million residents by 2030 while combating climate change impacts such as rising sea levels and . The plan set 10 goals across land, water, transportation, energy, air quality, and , including a target to reduce by 30% citywide by 2017 from 2005 levels through measures like improving energy efficiency in buildings, expanding public transit, and planting 1 million trees. An update in 2011 incorporated post-Hurricane Irene lessons, emphasizing resilience via waterfront protections and stormwater management, though independent assessments noted mixed progress on emission reductions due to economic factors and enforcement challenges. Post-mayoralty, Bloomberg channeled significant philanthropy toward climate mitigation via Bloomberg Philanthropies' Environment program, which focuses on transitioning to clean energy and preserving ecosystems. In 2019, he committed $500 million to the Beyond Carbon initiative, aimed at closing all remaining U.S. coal-fired power plants and blocking new natural gas facilities, expanding to an additional $500 million in September 2023 to accelerate fossil fuel phase-out and promote renewables. He has advocated ending federal subsidies and tax breaks for fossil fuels, arguing they distort markets and hinder clean energy adoption. In January 2025, following the U.S. withdrawal from the Paris Agreement, Bloomberg Philanthropies pledged to cover the U.S. share—approximately 22% of the $96.5 million biennial budget—for the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change secretariat's operations and reporting. Bloomberg has consistently endorsed a to internalize the external costs of emissions and incentivize low-carbon technologies, viewing it as a market-based tool compatible with economic growth. During his 2020 Democratic presidential campaign, he proposed reducing U.S. carbon emissions by 50% within 10 years, achieving 80% clean electricity by phasing out polluting sources, and investing in electric vehicles and grid upgrades. As UN Special Envoy for and Entrepreneurial Philanthropy since 2014, he has urged subnational actors like cities and businesses to drive progress amid federal reticence, emphasizing data-driven innovation over regulatory mandates alone. In 2023, he extended efforts to curb petrochemical plastics production, citing their contribution to emissions and waste.

Social Issues and Cultural Policies

Bloomberg has long supported rights, describing reproductive choice as a fundamental human right and donating over $50 million to organizations advocating for such access during his lifetime. Following the 2022 preserving protections in the state , he praised voters for upholding access to "safe and legal care." He has called for to codify rights into , particularly after the Supreme Court's 2022 Dobbs decision. On , Bloomberg endorsed legalization in a 2011 speech, framing it as consistent with conservative tenets of intervention in personal relationships. Earlier, however, as mayor in 2004, he vetoed a bill extending domestic partner benefits to LGBTQ city employees, a move decried by advocates as harmful to the community. His views on issues have drawn scrutiny; in 2016 and 2019 remarks, he referred to individuals as "some guy wearing a dress" or using pronouns like "he, she, or it," comments criticized for insensitivity amid debates over public accommodations. Bloomberg later apologized, stating he had consulted leaders, and in his 2020 presidential platform pledged to combat LGBTQ+ discrimination, close health disparities, and reverse Trump administration setbacks. As mayor from 2002 to 2013, Bloomberg pursued cultural policies prioritizing over individual autonomy, including the 2003 Smoke-Free Air Act that prohibited in bars, restaurants, and other indoor venues, later expanded in 2011 to parks, beaches, and pedestrian areas. In 2012, he proposed barring sales of sugary drinks larger than 16 ounces in restaurants, theaters, and arenas to address rates, a measure struck down by state courts as exceeding authority despite initial Board of Health approval. These initiatives correlated with declines in adult prevalence from 21.5% in 2002 to 13.5% by 2013, though opponents labeled them paternalistic encroachments on liberty. Bloomberg opposed marijuana legalization, terming it in 2019 "perhaps the stupidest thing" proposed due to the drug's potency and addictive risks, while favoring of minor possession offenses. Under his administration, the NYPD conducted over 400,000 marijuana arrests from 2002 to 2012, with data showing disproportionate impacts on and New Yorkers, who comprised 86% of those charged despite similar usage rates across demographics. In , Bloomberg backed , critiquing the Supreme Court's 2023 ruling against race-conscious college admissions as impeding institutions' ability to foster diverse student bodies reflective of societal demographics.

Philanthropy and Public Giving

Scale and Total Contributions

Michael Bloomberg's , channeled primarily through , have reached a total of $21.1 billion in contributions as of 2024. This figure encompasses grants to initiatives in , , , , and government innovation, drawn from his personal fortune amassed via . In 2024 alone, Bloomberg directed $3.7 billion toward these areas, marking the second consecutive year he topped the Chronicle of Philanthropy's annual list of America's largest donors. This annual outlay represented approximately 3.4% of his estimated of $109 billion at the time, per rankings. Bloomberg's scale of giving intensified post-2010, following his signing of , committing to donate the majority of his wealth during his lifetime or in his will. Notable single-year peaks include $3 billion in 2023, focused similarly on , , environment, and . Among his largest individual grants, a $1 billion donation in 2024 supported , building on prior commitments totaling over $3.5 billion to the institution since 1964 for student aid, research, and campus development. These contributions often prioritize measurable outcomes, such as data-driven reforms and urban projects, with reporting investments in over 1,000 cities worldwide by 2024. Relative to peers, Bloomberg's lifetime total places him among the top U.S. philanthropists, with cumulative giving exceeding $20 billion well before 2024 and comprising a substantial portion of his dividends and stock holdings. However, this represents less than 20% of his current , leaving room for further pledges aligned with his stated intent to address systemic challenges through targeted, evidence-based funding rather than unrestricted endowments.

Public Health Campaigns

Bloomberg Philanthropies has allocated over $1.6 billion since 2005 to global tobacco control efforts, primarily targeting low- and middle-income countries through the Bloomberg Initiative to Reduce Tobacco Use, which supports implementation of WHO's MPOWER measures such as monitoring tobacco use, protecting people from smoke, offering cessation help, warning via labels, enforcing advertising bans, and raising taxes. In 2008, Bloomberg partnered with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to commit $500 million for tobacco control in developing nations, focusing on policy adoption to curb the epidemic responsible for over 8 million annual deaths. These investments have contributed to protecting an estimated 300 million people from initiating smoking over 15 years, via collaborations with governments and NGOs to enact graphic warnings, tax hikes, and smoke-free laws. In February 2023, an additional $420 million was pledged to sustain these programs, emphasizing enforcement against illicit trade and youth-targeted marketing. The organization's Food Policy Program, launched to combat and diet-related diseases, has invested more than $435 million to promote healthier food environments, including subsidies for , taxes on sugary drinks, and reforms in cities worldwide. This builds on evidence from interventions like Mexico's soda tax, which supported, showing a 10% consumption drop post-implementation, alongside efforts to reduce sodium intake and trans fats through in over 40 countries. Complementary initiatives address other preventable risks, such as a $160 million grant in 2019-2021 for anti-vaping campaigns via groups like , which aimed to curb youth e-cigarette use amid rising teen rates from 1.5% in 2011 to 27.5% in 2019, though critics argue such funding overlooks e-cigarettes' potential as aids for adults, potentially prioritizing total nicotine abstinence over . In response to the opioid crisis, announced $50 million in November 2019 to expand treatment access and prevention in U.S. communities, distribution and data-driven interventions, reflecting a data-centric approach to noncommunicable diseases that also includes road safety and prevention programs saving an estimated millions of lives annually through urban redesigns and . These campaigns prioritize empirical interventions over unproven ones, with evaluations showing tobacco prevalence declines of up to 50% in supported countries like the and , though sustained impact depends on local enforcement amid industry pushback.

Environmental and Climate Initiatives

has allocated substantial resources to environmental causes, emphasizing transitions to clean energy, urban sustainability, and ocean conservation as part of its broader fight against . The organization's Environment program supports initiatives ranging from phasing out fossil fuels to improving air quality and promoting , with a focus on equipping local governments and businesses with data and tools for emissions reduction. A flagship effort is the Beyond Carbon campaign, launched in June 2019 with an initial $500 million commitment aimed at closing every -fired power plant in the United States and advancing clean alternatives, marking it as the largest coordinated philanthropic campaign against in the country at the time. In September 2023, Bloomberg announced an additional $500 million to expand the initiative beyond , targeting the phase-out of all fuels through litigation, advocacy, and support for renewable infrastructure, with partners like the claiming it contributed to the retirement of over 100 plants by 2023. The campaign has faced from sector stakeholders for potentially displacing jobs in fuel-dependent regions without commensurate economic transition plans. Complementing this, the Beyond Petrochemicals initiative, launched in September 2022 with $85 million, seeks to halt the expansion of facilities and plastic production, which identifies as major sources of and emissions. This includes funding for community opposition to new plants and on alternatives, though industry groups argue it threatens and in hubs like the Gulf Coast. Bloomberg has also played a pivotal role in global urban climate networks, serving as board president of C40 Cities, a group of nearly 100 major cities committed to science-based emissions reductions aligned with the . During his tenure as New York mayor, he hosted C40 summits that expanded the network, and through philanthropy, his organization has funded city-level programs like the $200 million American Sustainable Cities prize in 2024, supporting 25 U.S. municipalities in climate adaptation, and a $50 million fund announced in October 2023 for innovative urban solutions to global challenges including heat mitigation. In January 2025, following the U.S. withdrawal from commitments under President Trump, Bloomberg pledged to cover shortfalls in U.S. funding to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, contributing $4.5 million in 2024 for operational activities. Other efforts include a $51.7 million pledge in October 2024, alongside partners, to expand marine protected areas in , and ongoing support for air quality pilots and ocean ecosystem preservation, reflecting a strategy prioritizing subnational and non-governmental action where federal policies falter. Empirical outcomes, such as coal retirements linked to , suggest measurable progress in targeted sectors, though broader critiques question the scalability of philanthropy-driven interventions absent regulatory enforcement.

Education and Research Funding

Bloomberg has directed substantial philanthropic resources toward higher education, particularly financial aid programs at institutions like (JHU), his alma mater, to expand access for students from lower-income backgrounds. In 2018, he donated $1.8 billion to JHU, the largest private gift in the university's history at the time, enabling the school to eliminate loans from undergraduate financial aid packages and replace them with grants for students whose families earn less than $80,000 annually. This initiative increased enrollment of low-income students by providing need-blind admissions and full need-based aid without debt burdens. In July 2024, announced a $1 billion to JHU specifically for graduate and professional students, covering full tuition at the School of for those with family incomes below $175,000, thereby making tuition-free for approximately 80% of students and reducing average debt for others. This donation builds on prior commitments, including a $50 million contribution in 2013 alongside to establish the Bloomberg~Kimmel Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy, funding research into immune-based cancer treatments. Combined with the 2018 , Bloomberg's total contributions to JHU exceed $2.8 billion, prioritizing debt reduction to attract talent into fields like where high costs deter applicants from modest means. Beyond JHU, Bloomberg has targeted historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) to bolster medical training and research in underserved communities. In August 2024, pledged $600 million across four HBCU medical schools—$175 million each to , , , and Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science—to support scholarships, research infrastructure, and program expansion aimed at addressing physician shortages in black communities. These gifts, totaling $1.6 billion when including the JHU medical school donation, represent one of the largest single-donor investments in minority-serving medical institutions, with funds allocated for faculty recruitment, simulation labs, and to enhance diversity in healthcare . Bloomberg's education funding extends to K-12 initiatives through , including a $250 million commitment in 2024 to establish specialized high schools focused on healthcare careers, partnering with school districts to train students for roles like and medical technicians amid shortages. He has also supported the American Talent Initiative, a collaboration to increase low-income student enrollment at selective colleges via data-driven enrollment strategies and outreach. These efforts emphasize practical outcomes, such as job placement and reduced educational debt, over broader systemic reforms.

Government Innovation and Urban Programs

' government innovation efforts focus on equipping municipal governments with tools for data-driven decision-making, technical assistance, and scalable urban solutions. Launched as a core pillar of the organization's work, these programs draw from Bloomberg's experience as mayor, emphasizing performance metrics, analytics, and cross-city collaboration to address urban challenges like service delivery and resource allocation. The initiative provides learning networks, expert consultations, and competitions to over 1,200 cities worldwide, delivering more than 21,000 hours of support that influenced the allocation of $19.6 billion in American Rescue Plan Act funds by 2023. A flagship component is the What Works Cities Certification, introduced in 2015, which establishes benchmarks for local governments to integrate and into policymaking. The program assesses cities across 43 criteria, including , capabilities, and evidence-based budgeting, awarding certifications to those achieving at least 51% compliance, such as in 2025 for its use of in public safety and . By 2023, it had certified dozens of U.S. municipalities, promoting practices like predictive modeling for service demands and resident feedback loops to enhance urban efficiency. The U.S. Mayors Challenge, recurring since 2013, incentivizes bold urban innovations through cash prizes and implementation support, with the 2025 edition selecting finalist cities for projects tackling issues like housing affordability and via . Complementing this, Innovation Teams (i-teams) embed dedicated units in city halls to prototype solutions, as seen in a 2024 project where a supported team's analysis streamlined digital services, reducing administrative delays in resident interactions. Internationally, the effort expanded in July 2025 with the International City Data Alliance adding 15 municipalities across the Americas, focusing on AI and to modernize services like permitting and emergency response. Additional programs include the 2023-launched Bloomberg Cities Idea Exchange, a $50 million fund to replicate proven urban strategies globally, and state-level pilots like 2024 Innovation Team aimed at reducing through targeted interventions. The Bloomberg Harvard City Leadership Initiative further bolsters this by training mayors in , with tracks dedicated to fostering adaptive in dense urban environments. Overall, these initiatives have reached approximately 700 city governments in 150 countries by 2024, prioritizing measurable outcomes over ideological prescriptions.

Effectiveness Critiques and Empirical Outcomes

Critiques of ' effectiveness often center on the variable empirical impacts of its initiatives, with successes in targeted areas like contrasted against mixed or limited results in , prevention, and broader systemic change, amid questions of cost-effectiveness and political leverage. Independent evaluations have documented reductions in rates attributable to Bloomberg-funded campaigns, such as a 28% decline in adult smoking prevalence from 2002 to 2012 following indoor bans and taxes, correlating with an estimated 140,000 fewer smokers by 2011. Globally, the Bloomberg Initiative to Reduce Tobacco Use, launched in 2006 with over $1 billion invested, supported WHO Framework Convention implementation in low- and middle-income countries, contributing to a 10-15% drop in tobacco use prevalence in recipient nations by 2020, though causal attribution is complicated by concurrent national policies. However, these gains came at high per-smoker costs, estimated at $500-1,000 per prevented smoker in some urban programs, raising efficiency concerns relative to direct cessation aid. In efforts beyond tobacco, outcomes have been less conclusive, particularly for interventions. The soda size restriction, proposed in 2012 to curb large sugary drink sales, was struck down by courts before full implementation, and subsequent analyses found no significant citywide reduction in soda consumption or BMI trends attributable to related calorie-posting mandates, with rates rising from 20% to 24% among adults during Bloomberg's mayoralty despite multimillion-dollar campaigns. Critics, including economists, argue these regulatory approaches overlooked evidence favoring incentives over mandates, yielding marginal effects at scale while incurring legal and administrative costs exceeding $10 million in NYC alone. ' broader anti- grants, totaling hundreds of millions, have funded menu labeling expansions nationwide, but a 2018 of similar policies showed only 0.1-0.5% average BMI reductions, questioning against annual U.S. costs of $200 billion. Education funding, a major focus with over $1 billion directed toward urban school innovations, yielded mixed empirical results during Bloomberg's NYC mayoral control from 2002-2013. rates rose from 52% to 73%, and new small high schools replaced larger failing ones, with randomized evaluations finding 9-15% higher impacts in these schools versus closures. Yet, proficiency gains on state exams stagnated post-2009, and a 2013 study attributed much of the increase to lowered standards and credit recovery programs rather than instructional reforms, with NAEP scores showing only modest 4-7 point math gains amid persistent racial gaps. Post-Bloomberg audits revealed over 10% of graduates unprepared for college-level work, fueling critiques that $700 million in reform spending prioritized centralization over evidence-based interventions like class-size reductions, which meta-analyses indicate yield 0.1-0.2 standard deviation gains per student. Environmental initiatives, notably the Beyond Coal campaign funded with over $500 million since 2011, claim credit for retiring 65% of U.S. plants and a 43% national generation drop by , averting an estimated 100 million tons of annual CO2 emissions through state-level . However, econometric studies attribute 70-80% of retirements to falling and renewables subsidies rather than philanthropy-driven retirements, with Bloomberg grants comprising less than 1% of total costs exceeding $100 billion. Critics from think tanks highlight , such as grid reliability strains in coal-dependent regions and minimal global impact given China's coal expansion, estimating the campaign's cost per avoided ton of CO2 at $50-100—higher than market-based carbon pricing alternatives. Overall, while Bloomberg's $15 billion-plus in giving since 2006 has scaled proven tactics like controls, skeptics argue insufficient randomized trials and overreliance on limit causal insights, with philanthropic leverage often amplifying political alliances over pure empirical returns.

Major Controversies

Workplace Culture and Sexism Allegations

Allegations of sexism and a hostile workplace environment at have persisted since the company's founding in 1981, with former employees reporting crude remarks by Michael Bloomberg and a broader "frat boy" culture that demeaned women. Specific comments attributed to Bloomberg include telling a pregnant subordinate in the early 2000s to "kill it," referring to her , and remarking to female employees that if they wanted to succeed, they should not get pregnant or wear skirts. has denied systemic , pointing to initiatives promoting women to executive roles and a lack of successful lawsuits establishing liability. Multiple lawsuits have accused the firm of sexual harassment and gender discrimination, though none have reached trial verdicts against the company. In a prominent 2019 case, a former employee sued Bloomberg L.P. for $20 million, alleging repeated sexual harassment, including rape, by her supervisor; a New York appeals court dismissed claims against Bloomberg personally, ruling he could not be held vicariously liable as an individual owner under state law. The New York Court of Appeals upheld this in 2021, affirming that corporate officers are not strictly liable for subordinates' actions absent direct involvement. Bloomberg L.P. has frequently required nondisclosure agreements (NDAs) in settlements, with reports estimating dozens tied to harassment or discrimination claims; during his 2020 presidential campaign, Bloomberg authorized releases for three women from such NDAs to speak publicly. The allegations intensified during Bloomberg's 2020 Democratic presidential bid, as resurfaced accounts from a 2019 book by Jill Abramson detailed a workplace where women felt objectified, with Bloomberg allegedly fostering an environment of off-color jokes and preferential treatment for men. Bloomberg responded by apologizing for past remarks, stating in February 2020 that he was "sorry if somebody was hurt" and "probably wrong to make the jokes," while defending his record as a "champion" for women through company policies like paid parental leave implemented after he stepped down as CEO in 2001. Critics, including debate opponents, highlighted the pattern as evidence of unfitness for leadership, though empirical outcomes show Bloomberg L.P. grew to employ thousands with women comprising about 45% of the workforce by 2020, per company data.

Stop-and-Frisk Racial Profiling Claims

During Michael Bloomberg's tenure as from 2002 to 2013, the New York Police Department (NYPD) expanded its use of stop-and-frisk, a tactic allowing officers to briefly detain and search individuals based on of criminal activity. The number of stops rose from approximately 97,000 in 2002 to a peak of 685,407 in 2012, according to NYPD data analyzed by the New York Union (NYCLU), an advocacy group critical of the policy. Critics, including the NYCLU and , claimed this constituted , pointing to data showing that 85-90% of those stopped were or Latino, groups comprising about 52% of the city's population at the time, while only about 9% of stops involved whites. Moreover, contraband such as guns was found in just 0.14% of stops (about 14 per 10,000), and arrests occurred in under 10% of cases, suggesting to opponents that the practice often targeted minorities without sufficient basis, amounting to unconstitutional suspicionless searches. In the federal lawsuit Floyd v. City of New York, filed in 2008 by the Center for Constitutional Rights, plaintiffs argued that the NYPD's practices violated the Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable searches and the Fourteenth Amendment's through indirect . On August 12, 2013, U.S. District Judge ruled in favor of the plaintiffs, finding a policy of unintentional discrimination based on statistical evidence of disproportionate stops in minority neighborhoods, low rates of justified frisks, and supervisory tolerance of unconstitutional practices; she did not find direct racial animus but deemed the pattern systemic. The ruling mandated reforms, including a court-appointed monitor and pilot programs for body cameras. Bloomberg criticized the decision as ignoring crime reductions—homicides fell from 667 in 2002 to 335 in 2013—and accused Scheindlin of bias for accepting the case unsolicited, while defending stops as necessary in high-crime areas where, he noted, the majority of violent offenders were young and Latino males. Bloomberg's public defenses often highlighted causal links to crime deterrence, arguing in a 2013 statement that without aggressive policing, "thousands more New Yorkers would have been killed." In a 2015 speech at the Aspen Ideas Festival, he elaborated that to curb murders disproportionately committed by young minority males, police must conduct "disproportionate" stops in those communities: "One way you get weaponry off the streets is to throw a lot of cops against the wall and frisk them whenever they look funny... 95% of your murders... young black men, let's be honest." These remarks, resurfacing during his 2019-2020 presidential campaign, intensified profiling accusations, as they appeared to justify race-correlated targeting despite legal prohibitions on race as a sole factor. Bloomberg maintained the policy saved lives amid a national decline, with New York City's rate dropping over 50% during his mayoralty, though attribution to stop-and-frisk remains debated, as similar trends occurred citywide and nationally without equivalent tactics. Facing scrutiny in November 2019 amid his Democratic presidential bid, Bloomberg apologized at a church event, stating, "I was wrong, plainly and simply wrong," for the policy's scale and its "devastating" impact on and Latino communities, acknowledging it eroded trust in police without fully weighing costs. He reiterated regret in subsequent campaign stops, though critics, including NYCLU representatives, questioned the sincerity given prior unyielding support and the policy's persistence under his administration despite early data on low yields and disparities. Post-ruling reforms and sharp stop reductions under Mayor (to about 20,000 annually by 2017) coincided with continued crime declines, complicating claims of the tactic's indispensability, while profiling allegations influenced ongoing NYPD oversight and federal decrees. Sources amplifying profiling claims, such as NYCLU and ACLU reports, reflect priorities favoring civil rights over policing efficacy, often downplaying perpetrator demographics in high-crime precincts where stops concentrated.

Nanny-State Overreach and Regulatory Policies

During his three terms as from 2002 to 2013, Michael Bloomberg pursued aggressive regulations targeting behaviors linked to chronic diseases, including bans on trans fats, expansions of restrictions, and limits on sugary drink portions, which critics characterized as paternalistic "nanny state" interventions infringing on individual liberties and business operations. These policies prioritized top-down mandates over voluntary measures or market incentives, reflecting Bloomberg's view that government should actively shape personal choices to achieve population-level health outcomes. In December 2006, the Board of Health, under Bloomberg's influence, approved the first municipal ban on artificial trans fats in restaurant food, prohibiting partially hydrogenated oils in frying and baking effective July 2007 for and July 2008 citywide. The measure, justified by evidence linking trans fats to elevated heart disease risk, reduced their prevalence in NYC menus but imposed compliance costs on eateries, with some operators reporting recipe reformulations and higher expenses without consumer demand driving the change. Subsequent national FDA restrictions in 2015 echoed the policy, though critics argued it exemplified regulatory preemption of informed consumer decisions in favor of elite-driven health engineering. Bloomberg extended smoking prohibitions beyond indoor venues—a 2003 ban on bars and restaurants—to outdoor public spaces in February 2011, signing legislation that outlawed lighting up in 1,700 parks, 14 miles of beaches, boardwalks, marinas, and pedestrian plazas, with $50 fines for violations effective after a 90-day grace period. Proponents cited protection from secondhand smoke exposure, contributing to a decline in adult smoking rates from 21.5% in 2002 to 14.8% by 2013, but detractors, including enforcement officials, highlighted impracticality in open-air settings where dispersion minimizes risks, viewing it as symbolic overreach eroding personal freedoms in non-confined areas. The 2012 Sugary Drinks Portion Cap Rule, announced in May, restricted sales of beverages with over 25 calories per eight ounces exceeding 16 fluid ounces at restaurants, theaters, and street vendors—excluding alcohol, milk, or 100% juice—to combat obesity amid rising diabetes rates. Overturned by a New York state court in 2014 for arbitrarily exceeding Board of Health authority, the policy faced immediate backlash for circumventing legislative processes and enabling workarounds like multi-container purchases or smaller refills, with empirical analyses indicating negligible reductions in overall calorie intake or soda consumption due to substitution effects. Complementary efforts, such as mandatory calorie postings on chain restaurant menus since 2008 and voluntary sodium reduction pledges from manufacturers in 2010, similarly emphasized regulatory nudges but yielded mixed adherence and limited causal evidence of sustained behavioral shifts independent of broader trends. Libertarian and industry groups, such as the American Beverage Association, lambasted these initiatives as elitist dictates assuming government superiority in over individual agency, potentially fostering dependency and precedent for further encroachments like bans proposed in 2013. While Bloomberg's administration attributed drops in usage and prevalence to the regulations, skeptics noted factors like national awareness campaigns and market innovations, arguing the policies' costs—estimated in millions for compliance—and uneven enforcement undermined claims of net public benefit without rigorous cost-benefit analysis.

Political Opportunism and Position Reversals

Michael Bloomberg, a lifelong Democrat prior to entering politics, registered as a Republican in 2001 to facilitate his candidacy for , citing a crowded Democratic primary field dominated by established politicians that would hinder his outsider bid. This switch enabled his victory in the 2001 election against Democrat Mark Green, leveraging his business credentials and self-funding amid post-9/11 voter preferences for perceived competence over ideology. Following re-election in 2005, Bloomberg changed to independent status in 2007, allowing him to secure a third term in 2009 by sidestepping term limits he had extended via city council legislation, a move critics attributed to personal ambition rather than partisan loyalty. He rejoined the Democratic Party on October 10, 2018, explicitly positioning himself for a potential 2020 presidential challenge against incumbent President , after briefly considering an independent or third-party run in prior cycles. These serial party affiliations—Democrat to Republican (2001), to independent (2007), and back to Democrat (2018)—drew accusations of opportunism, as each aligned with electoral viability: Republican branding neutralized Democratic dominance in while appealing to fiscal conservatives; independence insulated him from national party baggage; and Democratic re-registration targeted the progressive primary electorate for his aborted 2020 bid. Bloomberg's defenders argued the shifts reflected pragmatic over ideological rigidity, consistent with his self-description as a fiscal conservative and social liberal unbound by party orthodoxy. However, the timing—particularly the 2018 switch after years as an independent—coincided with his reversal on a March 2019 decision against running for president, reopening the door by November 2019 amid Democratic field fragmentation. Bloomberg's most prominent policy reversal involved the New York Police Department's stop-and-frisk program, which he championed as from 2002 to 2013, overseeing a peak of 685,407 stops in 2012—85% involving or Latino individuals, yielding weapons in under 2% of cases. In a 2013 post-mayoral speech, he defended the tactic explicitly for targeting minority communities to preempt crime, stating it was necessary to "get the guns out of the hands of the young people who are doing the killings." Yet, on November 17, 2019, ahead of his Democratic presidential entry, Bloomberg apologized at a church event, conceding the policy had been a "mistake" that failed to account for its disproportionate impact on communities of color, despite crediting it for New York's homicide decline from 2,245 in 1990 to 333 in 2013. He reiterated apologies during the 2020 campaign, including on February 13 at a forum, emphasizing regret for not grasping the human cost earlier. Additional shifts during the 2020 race underscored adaptability to primary dynamics: Bloomberg initially resisted releasing women from nondisclosure agreements tied to harassment allegations from his business tenure but reversed on February 21, 2020, pledging to free at least three complainants after scrutiny. Critics, including campaign opponents, portrayed these pivots—on policing, NDAs, and even campaign infrastructure plans (abandoning a parallel DNC donation scheme in March 2020)—as calculated concessions to appease progressive voters, contrasting his mayoral record of aggressive policing and business deregulation. Empirical on stop-and-frisk's efficacy remains contested, with studies linking New York's crime drop more to broader national trends and pre-Bloomberg policing reforms than the tactic alone, suggesting reversals may reflect retrospective political calculus over causal reevaluation. Bloomberg's consistent advocacy for , however, showed no such flip, evolving from mayoral efforts like mandatory minimums for illegal firearms to founding with over $270 million in funding by 2022.

Ties to Pharmaceutical Interests and Sackler Family

In 2017, Michael Bloomberg met with Mortimer Sackler, son of Purdue Pharma co-founder Mortimer Sackler and a former board member of the company responsible for marketing OxyContin, to provide media strategy advice amid growing public scrutiny of the family's role in the opioid epidemic. Bloomberg, drawing on his experience as a media executive and former mayor, counseled the Sacklers on handling negative press, including efforts to influence coverage at Bloomberg Businessweek, where editors had been investigating Purdue's practices. The Sacklers sought Bloomberg's input after a series of exposés linked their aggressive promotion of OxyContin—prescribed over 100 million times by 2012 despite evidence of addiction risks—to over 400,000 overdose deaths in the U.S. from 1999 to 2017, according to Centers for Disease Control data. Bloomberg recommended Edward Skyler, his former deputy mayor and spokesman during his New York City tenure from 2002 to 2013, to assist the with . Skyler, who joined in 2014 as head of government affairs, subsequently advised the Sacklers on , including strategies to mitigate from opioid-related lawsuits that by 2019 had resulted in Purdue filing for and the family agreeing to pay up to $6 billion in settlements. The relationship stemmed partly from shared philanthropic interests in institutions, where both Bloomberg and the Sacklers have donated tens of millions; for instance, the Sacklers contributed over $100 million to museums like the before institutions began removing their names amid backlash. Broader pharmaceutical ties involve Bloomberg's oversight of Bloomberg LP, which provides financial data terminals used by major drug companies for market analysis, though no direct equity investments in Purdue or similar firms by Bloomberg personally have been disclosed. has funded initiatives, including $1.8 billion to School of Public Health since 2013 for and research, but received no documented grants from pharmaceutical entities; instead, it has disbursed over $3 billion annually in recent years primarily from Bloomberg's fortune derived from his company's services to various industries, including pharma. Critics, including investigative reports, have highlighted potential conflicts given Bloomberg's 2020 presidential campaign emphasis on anti-opioid measures, such as pledging $1 billion for addiction treatment, juxtaposed against his private counsel to the Sacklers. No evidence indicates Bloomberg influenced policy or regulatory outcomes favoring Purdue, but the advisory role underscores personal networks among billionaire philanthropists navigating overlapping spheres of business, media, and .

Personal Life

Family Dynamics and Relationships

Bloomberg married Susan Brown, a British-born , on , 1976, following her previous . The couple had two daughters: Emma, born in 1979, and Georgina, born in 1983. Their ended in in 1993 after nearly 18 years, amid reports of differing priorities exacerbated by Bloomberg's demanding at and later . Despite the split, Bloomberg and Brown maintained an amicable post- relationship, with Brown describing herself as remaining "best friends" with her ex-husband and occasionally residing in his townhouse during periods of separation from her subsequent partners. Bloomberg's daughters have pursued independent paths while benefiting from his wealth and . Emma Bloomberg, the elder, graduated from and , worked in and , and married Chris Frericks in before divorcing and wedding Jeremiah Kittredge, a former executive, in a private ceremony in January 2020. , an accomplished equestrian, competed internationally, owns the New York Empire equestrian team, and co-founded the Humane Generation initiative for . The sisters jointly operate the Emma and Georgina Bloomberg Foundation, focusing on , environment, and grants, reflecting a collaborative family dynamic in despite their parents' divorce. Since 2000, Bloomberg has been in a committed domestic partnership with Diana Taylor, a former New York State Banking Superintendent and investment banker, whom he met at a business luncheon. The couple, who live together in Bloomberg's Upper East Side townhouse, has explicitly rejected marriage, with Taylor stating in 2020 that they see no need for it after two decades together and that it would not change even if Bloomberg pursued higher office. Taylor has played a supportive role in Bloomberg's public life, including during his mayoral terms and 2020 presidential campaign, while maintaining her own career in finance and nonprofit boards, though she has faced scrutiny for defending Bloomberg's use of nondisclosure agreements in workplace disputes. Overall, Bloomberg's family relationships appear stable and low-conflict publicly, with his ex-wife and daughters expressing support during his political endeavors, and no reported estrangements or legal disputes among immediate kin.

Religious Beliefs and Practices

Michael Bloomberg was born on February 14, 1942, to a Jewish family in , , where his parents maintained some traditional practices, including a kosher kitchen and enrollment in during his childhood in Medford. Despite this upbringing in a predominantly non-Jewish environment, Bloomberg has described his early exposure to as cultural rather than devoutly observant, with limited emphasis on ritual adherence. Bloomberg identifies publicly as Jewish and has expressed pride in his heritage, particularly emphasizing ethical imperatives, communal solidarity, and strong support for as core to his understanding of . In a January 23, 2020, speech in , he highlighted "revering the miracle that is the state of " and combating anti-Semitism as central tenets, framing his through civic action and philanthropy rather than theological doctrine. He has donated significantly to Jewish organizations, including support for causes addressing anti-Semitism and Israeli , though his involvement appears driven by ethnic affinity and policy priorities over religious devotion. Bloomberg's personal beliefs lean secular, with statements indicating skepticism toward traditional notions of divinity and an afterlife. In a 2014 interview with New York Magazine, he remarked, "I am telling you, if there is a God, when I get to heaven I'm not stopping to be interviewed. I am heading straight in. I have earned my place in heaven. It’s not even close," reflecting a works-based confidence in moral actions securing posthumous reward, conditional on God's existence, rather than faith or ritual observance. He has not been publicly associated with regular synagogue attendance or strict halakhic practices, positioning himself as culturally Jewish while prioritizing pragmatic governance over religious conformity. Public displays of Jewish affiliation, such as participating in a candlelighting ceremony on December 5, 2013, as , align with civic symbolism rather than personal piety. Bloomberg's approach underscores a non-orthodox, assimilated focused on and anti-bigotry efforts, consistent with his broader secular outlook that subordinates supernatural beliefs to empirical outcomes and human agency.

Lifestyle and Public Persona


Bloomberg maintains a disciplined daily routine centered on early rising and . He wakes at 5:30 a.m. for a session involving cardio and , followed by a of fruits, , and . He arrives at the office by 7:30 a.m. to review news via Bloomberg terminals and engage in meetings, emphasizing data-driven decisions throughout the day. His exercise regimen includes running one hour daily on a and playing . Despite promoting measures like trans fat bans during his mayoralty, Bloomberg personally consumes Cheez-Its liberally, uses excessive salt, and drinks three to four coffees daily.
He owns approximately 14 properties worldwide, valued collectively at over $100 million as of 2020, including a five-story townhouse purchased in 1986 for $3.5 million, a estate acquired in 2011 for $22.5 million, a $10 million waterfront mansion, and a townhouse. Bloomberg enjoys skiing, piloting helicopters (owning a $4.5 million SPA A109S model), and using private jets, while hosting informal dinner parties featuring and . Bloomberg's public persona reflects a pragmatic, no-nonsense demeanor, characterized by direct and assertive communication without reliance on . He speaks quickly and focuses on simplicity in public addresses, aligning with his technocratic approach to problem-solving. As a philanthropist, he has donated over $6 billion to causes including , , and the environment, signing to commit the majority of his wealth. His style includes custom suits from tailor , underscoring a preference for understated professionalism over ostentation.

Public Image, Legacy, and Writings

Media Portrayals and Criticisms

Media outlets have frequently depicted Michael Bloomberg as a data-centric executive whose three terms as mayor from 2002 to 2013 prioritized and economic metrics, yielding praise for stabilizing the city post-9/11 but drawing rebukes for perceived and overregulation. Coverage in progressive-leaning publications often highlighted his billionaire status and pro-business stances as misaligned with grassroots Democratic priorities, while conservative commentators emphasized his interventions—such as the 2012 ban on sugary drinks over 16 ounces—as prototypical "nanny state" authoritarianism that eroded personal freedoms. These portrayals intensified during his short-lived 2020 Democratic presidential bid, where his $1 billion self-funded campaign was framed by outlets like as enabling fawning press that downplayed mayoral scandals until rivals amplified them. A pivotal media arose in November 2019 when announced it would refrain from investigating its owner, Michael Bloomberg, or other Democratic primary candidates amid his campaign launch, citing editorial firewalls but sparking accusations of from journalists and figures like . The decision prompted the Trump campaign to revoke credentials for reporters in December 2019, portraying the outlet as inherently biased toward its proprietor's ambitions. Critics in media watchdog circles argued this undermined the organization's credibility, especially as it continued probing foreign governments like despite domestic sensitivities. Bloomberg's past defenses of the NYPD's stop-and-frisk policy, which peaked at 685,000 stops in 2011 disproportionately affecting and New Yorkers, fueled critiques amplified in 2019-2020 coverage after his apologetic speech at a church on November 17, 2019. Resurfaced 2015 audio clips from a Bloomberg speech, where he justified the tactic by claiming "95% of your murders and your murderers and your assault people are black and Hispanic," ignited backlash including the #BloombergIsRacist hashtag and condemnations from outlets like Vox and for evoking stereotypes without empirical caveats on crime data correlations. Allegations of workplace sexism at , including a "Wit and Wisdom" booklet compiling his crude remarks on women—such as quips about killing sex drives—dominated 2020 campaign reporting, with and detailing lawsuits alleging a "frat house" environment and non-disclosure agreements silencing at least 18 female accusers. Bloomberg's responses, framing comments as era-appropriate banter, were critiqued in PBS and Washington Post analyses as evasive amid #MeToo scrutiny, though some reports noted the absence of formal HR complaints upheld in court. Mainstream coverage, while attributing claims to sources, often contextualized them within broader institutional biases favoring progressive narratives on gender dynamics over Bloomberg's denials.

Awards, Honors, and Recognitions

Bloomberg received the from President on January 4, 2024, the highest civilian honor in the , recognizing his leadership in business, government, and philanthropy, including efforts on and . In 2014, Queen Elizabeth II appointed him a Knight Commander of the (KBE) for services to the arts and relations between the and the . He was awarded the in 2014, often called the "Jewish ," for his philanthropy supporting Jewish communities, education, and initiatives, with a $1 million award that he donated to organizations combating . Bloomberg received the Mary Woodward Lasker Award for in 2009 from the Lasker Foundation, honoring his innovations in policy during his mayoralty, such as anti-smoking campaigns and calorie labeling mandates. He was inducted into the Association of Distinguished Americans in an unspecified year prior to 2021, recognizing his rise from modest beginnings to business success through determination and ethical leadership. Bloomberg has been honored with multiple honorary degrees, including a Doctor of Laws from in 2019 for his commitment to need-blind college access; from the at Chapel Hill in 2012; a Doctor of Laws from the in 2016; a doctorate of from in 2007; from in 2019; and a doctorate of from the University of Maryland in 2019. In recognition of his public service, he was named a honoree of the Samuel J. Heyman Service to America Medals by the Partnership for Public Service for demonstrating bold leadership across sectors.

Authored Books and Key Publications

Bloomberg by Bloomberg, published in September 1997 by Wiley, is Bloomberg's autobiography, co-authored with Bloomberg News editor-in-chief Matthew Winkler, which details his early career at Salomon Brothers, the 1981 founding of Innovative Market Systems (later Bloomberg L.P.), and the development of the Bloomberg Terminal financial data service. The book emphasizes Bloomberg's data-driven management principles, including performance-based compensation and a focus on technological innovation in financial services, drawing from his experiences in transforming the firm into a global provider of market analytics. A revised and updated edition appeared in 2001, incorporating reflections on the company's expansion amid the dot-com boom. In 2017, Bloomberg co-authored Climate of Hope: How Cities, Businesses, and Citizens Can Save the Planet with environmental advocate Carl Pope, published by , which became a New York Times bestseller. The work advocates for decentralized, pragmatic responses to , highlighting subnational actors such as municipalities and corporations—citing examples from Bloomberg's tenure as mayor, including post-Hurricane Sandy resiliency initiatives—over reliance on federal policy, while critiquing partisan gridlock in Washington. It proposes market-oriented solutions like carbon pricing and urban sustainability measures, grounded in ' programs, though some analyses note its emphasis on amid debates over the pace of emissions reductions. Beyond these, Bloomberg has contributed forewords and introductions to select volumes, such as the 2015 photography collection Gregory Heisler: 50 Portraits: Stories and Techniques from a Photographer's Photographer, but has not authored additional full-length books. His key publications primarily consist of these works, reflecting themes of entrepreneurial resilience and policy innovation, with influence extending through Bloomberg L.P.'s media outlets where he has penned opinion pieces on economics and governance.

Electoral History

Mayoral Elections Summary

Michael Bloomberg was first elected of New York City on November 6, 2001, running as a Republican despite the city's strong Democratic leanings and his own history as a Democrat. He defeated Democratic nominee Mark Green, the city's Public Advocate, in a close contest held weeks after the , benefiting from the popularity of term-limited incumbent , who endorsed him. The race marked the most expensive mayoral campaign in U.S. history at the time, with Bloomberg self-funding much of his effort. In the 2005 reelection, Bloomberg again ran as a Republican and secured a decisive victory over Democratic nominee , former borough president, on November 8. Official results certified Bloomberg with 753,089 votes to Ferrer's 503,219, equating to approximately 60% of the vote against 40%. The incumbent's strong performance crossed ethnic lines, drawing significant support from Black and Latino voters despite facing a Democratic opponent. Bloomberg's bid for a third term in 2009 followed a controversial change to the city's two-term limit, enacted by the City Council on , 2008, via a 29-22 vote that extended limits to three consecutive terms, enabling his candidacy. Having left the Republican Party in 2007, he ran as an independent and defeated Democrat Bill Thompson, the city comptroller, on November 3, 2009, by a narrower margin of about 5 percentage points amid voter backlash over the term limits override and the ongoing . This victory extended his tenure until 2013, after which term limits reverted.

Presidential Campaign Results

Bloomberg formally announced his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination on November 24, 2019, self-funding his campaign with over $500 million in expenditures by the time of his exit, primarily on . He adopted a strategy of bypassing the initial nominating contests in , , , and , instead concentrating efforts on the 14 Super Tuesday states and the caucus held on March 3, 2020. This approach aimed to leverage his financial resources for broad national exposure but yielded limited success, as he failed to qualify for ballots or mount competitive ground operations in the early states. On , Bloomberg's vote share averaged approximately 8% across the participating states, placing him fourth or lower in most contests behind , , and . He achieved his sole victory in the Democratic caucus, securing 48.3% of the vote (1,008 out of roughly 2,000 participants) and earning a plurality that translated to four pledged delegates from the territory's six total. In mainland states, performances included 20.5% in (second place but no delegates due to proportional allocation thresholds), 16.9% in , and single digits elsewhere like 9.1% in and 5.2% in , often insufficient to claim delegates under the 15% viability rule in many jurisdictions. Nationally, Bloomberg amassed 2,127,967 popular votes in the primaries he contested, equating to about 3.5% of the Democratic primary electorate in those races, while securing 31 pledged delegates overall before releasing them to support other candidates. This equated to roughly $18 million spent per delegate won, highlighting the inefficiency of his ad-heavy strategy amid voter preferences for candidates with stronger appeal and ideological alignment. Critics attributed the underperformance to Bloomberg's late entry, personal controversies resurfaced during the campaign, and a mismatch between his centrist, technocratic profile and the Democratic base's progressive leanings. On March 4, 2020, one day after , Bloomberg suspended his campaign, acknowledging the results did not justify continuation, and immediately endorsed as the nominee best positioned to defeat incumbent President . His delegates were freed to vote at the , with most aligning to Biden, contributing to the latter's consolidation of the field. Post-campaign, Bloomberg redirected resources to anti-Trump efforts, including super PAC funding that supported Biden's general election bid.

References

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