Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Bloomberg Proposes Sweeping Gun Agenda, Including Federal Licensing

The former New York City mayor unveiled a detailed plan for addressing gun violence in Aurora, Colo., the site of a 2012 massacre at a movie theater.

Video
bars
0:00/3:01
-0:00

transcript

Who Is Michael Bloomberg? | 2020 Presidential Candidate

The billionaire businessman and former mayor of New York is hoping he can forge a path to the Democratic nomination by positioning himself as a centrist who can take on President Trump.

A billionaire businessman, philanthropist and former mayor of New York City. “Oh, you’re welcome.” Michael Bloomberg is making a late entry … “This is the road that I’m taking.” … into the Democratic presidential race. So who is he? Bloomberg grew up outside of Boston. After college and Harvard Business School, he got into investment banking. In the 1980s, he created the Bloomberg Terminal, a financial tool for investors that would make him a billionaire. And in 2001, Bloomberg ran for mayor of New York City as a Republican. “That should make a great politician.” Then in the middle of his campaign, New York City changed forever on Sept. 11. As New York’s outgoing mayor took the national stage, he gave Bloomberg the thumbs up. “Well, I’m urging people to vote for Mike Bloomberg.” “I, Michael R. Bloomberg —” Bloomberg won. One of his priorities as mayor was tackling public health. “Sixty-four ounce. Just think about that.” “Don’t go near these things.” He also pushed for controversial stop-and-frisk policies that disproportionately affected minority communities. “Everything the New York City Police Department has done is absolutely —is legal.” But just days before entering the presidential race this year, he apologized. “I just want you to know that I realize back then, I was wrong.” In 2007, he left the G.O.P. And in 2008, during the financial crisis, he asked the City Council to extend term limits in order to let him run for a controversial third term. “Yes.” “No.” “No.” “Aye.” “Aye.” The vote passed, and he won re-election. “We’re going to make the next four years the best yet.” So what about the issues? After he left office in 2013, Bloomberg went back to running his company, which includes a news division. But he’s also focused on supporting candidates … “Let’s elect a sane, competent person.” … and causes he cares about, many of which are now key parts of his platform. Bloomberg is a vocal supporter of gun reform. “We cannot have a society where you go out in the street, and you can get blown away. We just have to say enough is enough.” He also has big plans for health care reform and fighting climate change. “Trump has done us a favor. Every time he riles against climate change, the money comes flooding in.” Overall, Bloomberg is positioning himself as a moderate in the Democratic field. “With the right candidate, we can turn areas from red to blue.” So what about his chances? They’re somewhat unknown. As a billionaire and fellow New Yorker, Bloomberg supporters feel he is uniquely positioned to take on President Trump. “I’m a New Yorker, and I know a con when I see one.” “There is nobody I’d rather run against than ‘Little Michael.’ That I can tell you.” But he has challenges ahead. He’s as not well known outside of New York City. Also, Bloomberg probably won’t participate in any of the Democratic debates, and he’s likely to skip the early primaries and caucuses. His hope: to surge on Super Tuesday and chart a path to the nomination. “I am running for president to defeat Donald Trump, and to unite and rebuild America.”

Video player loading
The billionaire businessman and former mayor of New York is hoping he can forge a path to the Democratic nomination by positioning himself as a centrist who can take on President Trump.CreditCredit...Chet Strange for The New York Times

Michael R. Bloomberg proposed a sweeping array of federal gun-control measures on Thursday, calling for a national gun licensing system and stricter background checks, hundreds of millions of dollars in new enforcement spending and the passage of a federal red-flag law that would allow courts to temporarily confiscate firearms from people deemed dangerous.

Mr. Bloomberg, the former mayor of New York City and the most recent entrant in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination, paired the policy announcement with a visit to Aurora, Colo., the site of a 2012 massacre at a movie theater that left a dozen people dead and many more injured. He appeared with State Representative Tom Sullivan of Colorado, whose son was killed in the Aurora shooting. Mr. Sullivan, a Democrat, was elected to the Legislature in 2018, unseating an incumbent Republican.

Mr. Sullivan said in an interview that he was endorsing Mr. Bloomberg for president because he trusted him above all the other candidates to wage a fight for stricter gun laws. Mr. Bloomberg called him the day before Thanksgiving, Mr. Sullivan said, to seek a meeting and ask for his support — the first presidential candidate to do so.

“I’ve seen what he can do, and has been doing, since the day my son was murdered on his 27th birthday in the Aurora theater massacre,” Mr. Sullivan said on Thursday. “There’s no one else I’m confident would be in the White House and stand up to the gun lobby.”

By putting an ambitious gun-violence plan at the center of his emerging candidacy, Mr. Bloomberg is seeking to leverage his long record on the issue to set himself apart in the Democratic race. He has made gun control a personal cause since his days as mayor of New York, spending tens of millions of dollars from his personal fortune supporting stricter gun laws at the federal level and in a number of states, including Colorado. And it is a policy area where Mr. Bloomberg, an ideological moderate who became a Democrat only in 2018, is closely aligned with the party’s liberal base, and where his prolific personal spending has bonded him closely with important activist groups.

But if Mr. Bloomberg has strong credentials as a gun-control advocate, it remains to be seen whether Democratic voters will give him more credit than other candidates for outlining a detailed agenda on the subject. Though there are gradations in their views and priorities, all of the major Democratic presidential candidates have endorsed a common set of policies on gun control, including imposing comprehensive background checks and reviving the federal ban on assault-style weapons. All but one of the leading candidates have endorsed a form of federal gun licensing, with former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. as a notable exception.

The plan Mr. Bloomberg is unveiling on Thursday represents, in some respects, a shift leftward even for him. Where his advisers have in the past expressed some skepticism about the idea of a national gun-licensing requirement, he is now embracing the idea.

The policy paper drafted by Mr. Bloomberg’s campaign said that he would seek to require all would-be gun buyers to obtain a license, either from the Department of Justice or from a state-level authority, before the purchase could go through. The paper also calls for the creation of a “central system” for tracking illegal guns and people who have been barred by courts or other authorities from possessing guns.

Mr. Bloomberg’s endorsement of a federal licensing policy is likely to ripple widely in the world of gun-control advocacy, where many groups, including those funded by Mr. Bloomberg, have focused chiefly on tightening background checks. The idea of a national licensing requirement, which would be even more restrictive, gained wide traction in the presidential race after Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey proposed one in May. At the time, John Feinblatt, a prominent gun-control strategist close to Mr. Bloomberg, expressed hesitation about the policy and suggested it was not “research tested.”

But versions of the policy were quickly endorsed by leading candidates such as Senators Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Ind. Mr. Biden has not gone as far, proposing instead that states be encouraged to set up licensing systems but suggesting that it would be excessive and politically risky for the federal government to get directly involved in issuing gun licenses.

The stakes for Mr. Bloomberg in the gun debate may be particularly high, as he seeks to persuade Democratic voters to look past some of his more conservative positions — including his record of championing aggressive policing as mayor, and his general sympathy for the banking industry — and embrace him as a key champion of a few core progressive concerns. And as other Democrats criticize the way he is using his personal fortune in the election, Mr. Bloomberg has pointed to his self-funded advocacy on guns, climate and other issues as proof of his good intentions.

A number of the gun-control ideas Mr. Bloomberg is proposing have been debated extensively in Congress, endorsed by other Democratic presidential candidates and, in some cases, enacted at the state level by Democratic-controlled governments. His policy paper identifies states that have tried out some of the ideas he is endorsing, including red-flag laws, certain kinds of background checks, the elimination of gun-sales loopholes and different systems for tracking firearm sales.

Colorado has been a proving ground for some of those policies: As the state has trended steadily toward the Democrats, lawmakers there have passed laws tightening background checks, limiting the size of ammunition magazines and enacting red-flag procedures for seizing firearms from certain people. But the implementation of certain gun restrictions remains contested, with conservative Colorado sheriffs resisting them.

Mr. Sullivan, who said he had been briefed on Mr. Bloomberg’s plan, described it as mainly containing “the standard issues” that gun-control groups advocate, with the notable addition of the national licensing policy. That measure, he said, was “the next heavy lift” for lawmakers like him.

“It would be tough to do, but I think we’re headed that way,” he said.

Mr. Bloomberg’s agenda includes a long list of other restrictions on firearms and ammunition, including raising the minimum age for gun purchasers to 21, banning guns in schools and creating a safe-storage requirement for gun owners. He is proposing to appoint a White House gun coordinator and to declare gun violence a public health emergency, and to empower the Consumer Product Safety Commission to oversee guns as it does other products.

Mr. Bloomberg is also calling for at least $300 million in new federal funding for gun violence prevention, split three ways between local violence-reduction programs, public health research and an expanded budget for the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

And like other candidates, Mr. Bloomberg aims to repeal a 2005 federal law, the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act, that gives gun makers special protections from exposure to lawsuits.

The gun-control platform is Mr. Bloomberg’s second policy announcement since joining the presidential race last month, after a slimmer criminal-justice agenda released earlier this week.

Alexander Burns is a national political correspondent, covering elections and political power across the country, including Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign. Before coming to The Times in 2015, he covered the 2012 presidential election for Politico. More about Alexander Burns

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section A, Page 23 of the New York edition with the headline: Bloomberg, a Crusader Against Guns, Unveils A Detailed Action Plan. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT