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Trump vs. Bloomberg, more than a Twitter battle

By Clarence Page, Tribune Content Agency on

Positions like that begin to explain why a recent Washington Post-IPSOS poll found more than 8 in 10 black Americans believe Trump is a racist. Trump has good reason to try to deflect the racism charge onto Bloomberg or anybody else but himself.

In November, Bloomberg reversed his position, declaring, "I was wrong." Trump has not. Instead, he has repeatedly maligned New York, Chicago and some other cities that have dropped stop-and-frisk, even as they turned to more effective, less-disruptive crime-fighting methods.

Trump calls Bloomberg a racist? Pot, meet kettle.

Trump has reason to feel unsettled by Bloomberg's rise. While Trump's bid to find dirt on previous front-runner Joe Biden led to impeachment, he now faces a potentially bigger threat to his presidency in Bloomberg.

Bloomberg is Biden without the same baggage. He's much wealthier than Trump. Trump knows media as a reality TV star, but Bloomberg founded one of the biggest media companies on the planet, which bears his name. Trump, a child of wealth, presents himself as self-made. Bloomberg really did pull himself up by his own bootstraps.

And both of these sons of Queens, NYC, have a generous supply of chutzpah that makes their Twitter battle sound like a WWE match.

"Mini Mike Bloomberg is a LOSER who has money but can't debate and has zero presence, you will see," Trump tweeted Thursday, bringing to mind his shots at such Republican rivals as Jeb Bush, who Trump maligned as "low energy Jeb."

Layering his insults on thick, Trump called Bloomberg a 5-foot-4 "mass of dead energy who does not want to be on the debate stage with these professional politicians." (For the record, Bloomberg is reportedly 5-foot-7, according to his medical records.)

 

Bloomberg, no slouch at Big Apple audacity, tweeted back: "We know many of the same people in NY. Behind your back they laugh at you & call you a carnival barking clown. They know you inherited a fortune & squandered it with stupid deals and incompetence."

Smack! Twitter fans picked up the theme. "#carnivalbarkingclown" was soon trending.

Students of Trump's style understand how these shenanigans have a purpose. A lot of voters come to the voting booth for the fight as much as for views on issues. They want to know, will this candidate fight for me? Trump wins many votes by standing ready and eager to fight for them. Bloomberg sounds ready and eager to fight Trump for them.

It is the mere prospect of a better president that boosted Bloomberg to third place in a new national Quinnipiac University poll a day before the New Hampshire primary, surging ahead of Elizabeth Warren and Pete Buttigieg to third place with 15%. Topping him were Bernie Sanders with 25% support and Joe Biden at 17%. Bloomberg has helped himself with a wave of TV and web advertising.

With hedge fund manager Tom Steyer also in the Democratic race, Campaign 2020 is turning into a battle of the billionaires that reminds me of an old African proverb: When elephants fight, the grass suffers. The grass is us, the voters, unless we hold all candidates to account on real issues, along with our current billionaire president.

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(E-mail Clarence Page at cpage@chicagotribune.com.)


(c) 2020 CLARENCE PAGE DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 

 

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