NYC voters consider 3rd term for billionaire mayor

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NEW YORK (AP) — How badly does Michael Bloomberg want a third term as mayor of New York? The billionaire is spending $35,000 an hour out of his own pocket and could burn through more than $100 million on what is already the most expensive self-financed campaign in American history.

Even though he has always been ahead — now leading his Democratic opponent by 15 to 18 percentage points in the polls — Bloomberg has spent money as if the race were a dead heat, buying nonstop ads, targeted automatic telephone calls and high-priced consultants' time.

"It's typical New York hubris," said Baruch College public affairs professor Doug Muzzio. "The Yankees spend more on their players than any team in the league. This mayor spends more on elections than anyone in history. The only difference is, he always wins."

For Bloomberg, a 67-year-old media tycoon with an estimated worth of $17.5 billion, his biggest challenge has been in overcoming the negative publicity of reversing his longtime support for term limits and persuading the City Council to change the law last year so he could run for a third term.

His Democratic challenger, city comptroller William Thompson Jr., has run ads hammering Bloomberg over the reversal, but his message has been drowned out by Bloomberg's barrage of advertising, which began in April and never let up. Recent polls show the percentage of voters less likely to choose Bloomberg because of term limits — about 43 percent —hasn't changed.

More than a week before Election Day, Bloomberg had already broken his own spending record of $85 million from the 2005 race, dwarfing even the $63 million that Texas billionaire Ross Perot pumped into his independent presidential run in 1992.

In 2001, when Bloomberg was running as a politically untested former CEO, he said early on that he could not envision spending more than $30 million because "at some point, you start to look obscene." He went on to spend $74 million that year.

The longtime Democrat from Medford, Massachusetts, became a Republican to avoid a crowded primary that year, narrowly winning with Rudy Giuliani's endorsement just weeks after the Sept. 11 attacks. Bloomberg has since left the Republican Party and is not registered with any party, but he is running again on the Republican and Independence Party lines.

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